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TO 


# 1 NATIONAL BESTSELLER 




THE ART OF THE 




DONALD J. TRUMP with TONY SCHWARTZ 













The Art of the Deal is a commonsense guide to personal finance. In practical-advice books, 
as in life, there are no guarantees, and readers are cautioned to rely on their own judgment 
about their individual circumstances and to act accordingly. 

A Ballantine Book 

Published by The Random House Publishing Group 
Copyright © 1987 by Donald J. Trump 
All rights reserved. 

Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, an imprint of The Random House 
Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in 
Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto. 

Ballantine and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc. 

www.ballantinebooks.com 

elSBN: 978-0-307-57533-3 


v3.1 r3 


To my parents—Fred and Mary Trump 



Acknowledgments 


I owe special thanks to several people who made it possible 
for me to complete this book in the face of my other 
responsibilities. Ivana Trump, my wonderful wife, and my 
three children were understanding about the many weekends 
that I spent working on the book. Si Newhouse first came to 
me and convinced me to do a book despite my initial 
reluctance. Howard Kaminsky, Peter Osnos, and many others 
at Random House have been enthusiastic, energetic supporters 
of the book. 

Tony Schwartz wishes to thank the many people who gave 
generously of their time, in particular, Robert Trump, Der 
Scutt, Nick Ribis, Blanche Sprague, Norman Levine, Harvey 
Freeman, Tony Gliedman, A1 Glasgow, John Barry, and Dan 
Cooper. For typing, photocopying, copyediting, research, and 
fact checking, thanks to Ruth Mullen, Gail Olsen, Adina 
Weinstein, Deborah Immergut, and Nancy Palmer. Without 
Norma Foerderer, sweet Norma, running interference for me, 
I never could have gotten the time and access I needed. My 
agent, Kathy Robbins, is the best at what she does, but also 
much more: editor, cheerleader, confidante. Ed Kosner, the 
extraordinary editor of New York, has long been a source of 



ideas, inspiration and sage counsel. My children, Kate and 
Emily, are a joy, a challenge, and an inspiration. My wife, 
Deborah, is the most supportive person I’ve ever known, my 
first editor, my best friend, and—after ten years still the love 
of my life. 



Contents 


Cover 

Other Books by This Author 

Title Page 

Copyright 

Dedication 

Acknowledgments 

1. Dealing: A Week in the Life 

2 . Trump Cards: The Elements of the Deal 

3 . Growing Up 

4 . The Cincinnati Kid: Prudence Pays 

5 . The Move to Manhattan 

6 . Grand Hotel: Reviving 42nd Street 

7 . Trump Tower: The Tiffany Location 
Photo Insert 

8 . Gaming: The Building on the Boardwalk 

9 . Wynn-Fall: The Battle for Hilton 


0. Low Rent, High Stakes: The Showdown on Central 
'ark South 

1. Long Shot: The Spring and Fall of the USFL 

2 . Ice Capades: Rebuilding Wollman Rink 

3 . Comeback: A West Side Story 

4 . The Week That Was: How the Deals Came Out 

About the Author 


1 

DEALING 


A Week in the Life 


1 don’t do it for the money. I’ve got enough, much more 
than I’ll ever need. I do it to do it. Deals are my art form. 
Other people paint beautifully on canvas or write 
wonderful poetry. I like making deals, preferably big deals. 
That’s how I get my kicks. 

Most people are surprised by the way I work. I play it very 
loose. I don’t carry a briefcase. I try not to schedule too many 
meetings. I leave my door open. You can’t be imaginative or 
entrepreneurial if you’ve got too much structure. I prefer to 
come to work each day and just see what develops. 

There is no typical week in my life. I wake up most 
mornings very early, around six, and spend the first hour or 
so of each day reading the morning newspapers. I usually 
arrive at my office by nine, and I get on the phone. There’s 
rarely a day with fewer than fifty calls, and often it runs to 
over a hundred. In between, I have at least a dozen meetings. 
The majority occur on the spur of the moment, and few of 
them last longer than fifteen minutes. I rarely stop for lunch. I 




leave my office by six-thirty, but I frequently make calls from 
home until midnight, and all weekend long. 

It never stops, and I wouldn’t have it any other way. I try to 
learn from the past, but I plan for the future by focusing 
exclusively on the present. That’s where the fun is. And if it 
can’t be fun, what’s the point? 



MONDAY 


9:00 a.m. My first call is to Alan (“Ace”) Greenberg, on the 
trading floor of Bear Sterns, a major Wall Street investment 
banking firm. Alan is the CEO of Bear Sterns, he’s been my 
investment banker for the past five years, and he’s the best 
there is. Two weeks ago, we began buying stock in Holiday 
Inns. It was selling in the 50s. As of this morning, Alan tells 
me, I own just over one million shares, or slightly more than 4 
percent of the company. The stock closed Friday at $65 a 
share, mostly, Alan says, because word is out on the street that 
I’ve been a big buyer, and there’s speculation I am planning a 
run at the company. 

The truth is I’m keeping my options open. I may ultimately 
go for control of Holiday, which I think is somewhat 
undervalued. At the current stock price, I could get control for 
less than $2 billion. Holiday’s three casino-hotels could be 
worth nearly that much—and the company owns another 
300,000 hotel rooms besides. 

A second option, if the stock price goes high enough, is to 
sell my stake and take a very nice profit. If I did that today, 
I’d already be up about $7 million. The third possibility is that 
Holiday may eventually offer to buy back my shares, at a 
premium, simply to get rid of me. If the premium is big 
enough, I’ll sell. 

In any case, I enjoy seeing the lengths to which bad 
managements go to preserve what they call their independence 



—which really just means their jobs. 

9:30 a.m. Abraham Hirschfeld calls me, looking for advice. 
Abe is a successful real estate developer but he wants to be a 
politician. Unfortunately for Abe, he’s a far better developer 
than politician. 

This fall, Abe tried to run for lieutenant governor against 
Governor Cuomo’s hand-picked candidate, Stan Lundine. 
Cuomo led a court fight to get Hirschfeld off the ballot on 
technical grounds, and sure enough, halfway into the 
campaign, the court ruled Hirschfeld out. Abe knows I’m 
friendly with the governor, and he wants my advice now on 
whether he should endorse Cuomo or switch parties and 
endorse Cuomo’s opponent. I tell him it’s a no-contest 
question—stick with a winner and a good guy at that. 

We set a meeting for Thursday. 

10:00 a.m. I call Don Imus to thank him. Imus has one of the 
most successful radio shows in the United States on WNBC, 
and he’s been helping to raise money for the Annabel Hill 
fund. 

I’m amazed at how this has snowballed into such a media 
event. It began last week when I saw a national news report by 
Tom Brokaw about this adorable little lady from Georgia, 
Mrs. Hill, who was trying to save her farm from being 
foreclosed. Her sixty-seven-year-old husband had committed 
suicide a few weeks earlier, hoping his life insurance would 
save the farm, which had been in the family for generations. 



But the insurance proceeds weren’t nearly enough. It was a 
very sad situation, and I was moved. Here were people who’d 
worked very hard and honestly all their lives, only to see it all 
crumble before them. To me, it just seemed wrong. 

Through NBC I was put in touch with a wonderful guy 
from Georgia named Frank Argenbright, who’d become very 
involved in trying to help Mrs. Hill. Frank directed me to the 
bank that held Mrs. Hill’s mortgage. The next morning, I 
called and got some vice president on the line. I explained that 
I was a businessman from New York, and that I was interested 
in helping Mrs. Hill. He told me he was sorry, but that it was 
too late. They were going to auction off the farm, he said, and 
“nothing or no one is going to stop it.” 

That really got me going. I said to the guy: “You listen to 
me. If you do foreclose, I’ll personally bring a lawsuit for 
murder against you and your bank, on the grounds that you 
harassed Mrs. Hill’s husband to his death.” All of a sudden the 
bank officer sounded very nervous and said he’d get right 
back to me. 

Sometimes it pays to be a little wild. An hour later I got a 
call back from the banker, and he said, “Don’t worry, we’re 
going to work it out, Mr. Tramp.” Mrs. Hill and Frank 
Argenbright told the media, and the next thing I knew, it was 
the lead story on the network news. 

By the end of the week, we’d raised $40,000. Imus alone 
raised almost $20,000 by appealing to his listeners. As a 



Christmas present to Mrs. Hill and her family, we’ve 
scheduled a mortgage-burning ceremony for Christmas Eve in 
the atrium of Trump Tower. By then, I’m confident, we’ll 
have raised all the money. I’ve promised Mrs. Hill that if we 
haven’t, I’ll make up any difference. 

I tell Imus he’s the greatest, and I invite him to be my guest 
one day next week at the tennis matches at the U.S. Open. I 
have a courtside box and I used to go myself almost every 
day. Now I’m so busy I mostly just send my friends. 

11:15 a.m. Harry Usher, the commissioner of the United 
States Football League, calls. Last month, the jury in the 
antitrust suit we brought against the National Football League 
ruled that the NFL was a monopoly, but awarded us only 
token damages of one dollar. I’ve already let the better players 
on my team, the New Jersey Generals, sign with the NFL. But 
the ruling was ridiculous. 

We argue about the approach we should take. I want to be 
more aggressive. “What worries me,” I say to Harry, “is that 
no one is pushing hard enough on an appeal.” 

12:00 noon Gerry Schoenfeld, head of the Shubert 
Organization, the biggest Broadway theater owners, calls to 
recommend a woman for a job as an office administrator. He 
tells me the woman specifically wants to work for Donald 
Trump, and I say she’s crazy but I’ll be happy to see her. 

We talk a little about the theater business, and I tell Gerry 
I’m about to take my kids to see Cats, one of his shows, for a 



second time. He asks if I’m getting my tickets through his 
office. I tell him that I don’t like to do that sort of thing. 
“Don’t be silly,” he says. “We have a woman here whose job 
it is to handle tickets for our friends. Here’s her number. 
Don’t hesitate to call.” 

It’s a nice gesture from a very nice guy. 

1:15 p.m. Anthony Gliedman stops by to discuss the Wo liman 
Rink project. Gliedman was housing commissioner under Ed 
Koch. At the time we fought a lot, and even though I ended 
up beating him in court, I always thought he was bright. I 
don’t hold it against people that they have opposed me. I’m 
just looking to hire the best talent, wherever I can find it. 

Tony has been helping to coordinate the rebuilding of the 
Wo liman Skating Rink in Central Park, a project the city failed 
at so miserably for seven years. In June I offered to do the job 
myself. Now we’re ahead of schedule, and Tony tells me that 
he’s set up a press conference for Thursday to celebrate the 
last important step in construction: pouring the concrete. 

It doesn’t sound like much of a news event to me, and I ask 
him if anyone is likely to show up. He says at least a dozen 
news organizations have RSVPd yes. So much for my news 
judgment. 

2:00 p.m. I get deposed in a lawsuit we’ve brought against a 
contractor on Trump Tower. Halfway into the job we had to 
fire the company for total incompetence, and we’re suing for 
damages. I hate lawsuits and depositions, but the fact is that if 



you’re right, you’ve got to take a stand, or people will walk all 
over you. In any case, there’s no way I could avoid 
depositions, even if I never brought a lawsuit myself. 
Nowadays, if your name is Donald Trump, everyone in the 
world seems to want to sue you. 

3:00 p.m. I ask Norma Foerderer, my executive assistant and 
the person who keeps my life organized, to bring me lunch: a 
can of tomato juice. I rarely go out, because mostly, it’s a 
waste of time. 

3:15 p.m. I put in a call to Sir Charles Goldstein; he’s out, and 
I leave a message. He’s a successful real estate attorney, but 
not one of my favorites. 

I’m pretty sure Charlie Goldstein is from the Bronx, but 
he’s a very pompous guy and has a tendency to act like 
royalty, so I call him Sir Charles. Over the weekend, I heard 
that Lee Iacocca had hired Sir Charles to represent him on a 
deal in Palm Beach where Lee and I intend to be partners. Lee 
had no way of knowing about my past experience with Sir 
Charles. A while back, I was in the middle of making a deal 
with a guy who needed an attorney, and I recommended Sir 
Charles. The next thing I knew, Sir Charles was 
recommending to his client that he not make the deal with me. 
I couldn’t believe it! 

This deal is to buy two condominium towers in the Palm 
Beach area. I own a house in Palm Beach—a spectacular place 
called Mar-a-Lago—and one day last winter, when I was 



down for the weekend, I went out to have lunch with some 
friends. On the way, a pair of beautiful gleaming white towers 
caught my eye. I made a couple of calls. It turned out they’d 
been built for about $120 million and a major New York bank 
had just foreclosed on the developers. The next thing I knew I 
was making a deal to buy the project for $40 million. 

A mutual friend, William Fugazy, first mentioned that Lee 
and I should do a real estate deal together. I think Lee is an 
extraordinary businessman who has done wonders in turning 
Chrysler around, and I also like him a great deal personally. 
So one thing led to another and we began talking about the 
towers. It’s a substantial investment, and I’m not certain Lee is 
absolutely sure yet that he wants to go forward. If that’s the 
case, it occurs to me, he’s done the perfect thing by hiring an 
attorney I don’t like. And that’s precisely what I intend to tell 
Sir Charles when he calls me back. 

3:30 p.m. I call my sister, Maryanne Barry, to discuss a recent 
decision in a lawsuit we are contesting in Atlantic City. 
Maryanne is a federal court judge in New Jersey, and her 
husband, John, is a talented attorney I have used on many 
occasions. 

“Can you believe they ruled against us?” I ask her. 
Maryanne is very smart, she obviously knows a lot more 
about the law than I do, and she’s as surprised as I am. I tell 
her that I’ve arranged to have all the materials from the case 
sent to John immediately, because I want him to handle the 



appeal. 

4:00 p.m. I go to our conference room to look at slides of 
potential Christmas decorations for the atrium in Trump 
Tower. The spectacular six-story marble atrium has become 
one of the leading tourist attractions in New York City. More 
than 100,000 people a week come from all over the world to 
see it and shop in it, and it’s now a symbol of the Trump 
Organization. That’s why I still get involved in details like 
what Christmas decorations we should use. 

I don’t like most of what I’m shown. Finally, I see a huge 
and magnificent gold wreath for the entrance to the building, 
and decide we should use just that. Sometimes—not often, but 
sometimes—less is more. 


* * * 

4:30 p.m. Nicholas Ribis, a New Jersey attorney who handled 
the licensing of both my Atlantic City casinos, calls to say he’s 
about to leave for Sydney, Australia, to pursue a deal I’m 
considering. He tells me it’s a twenty-four-hour flight, and I 
tell him I’m very glad he’s going instead of me. 

The deal, however, may be worth the trip. The government 
of New South Wales is in the midst of choosing a company to 
build and operate what they envision as the world’s largest 
casino. We’re a front-runner for the job, and Nick is going 
over to meet with the key government people. He tells me 
he’ll call from Australia as soon as he has any news. 



5:15 p.m. I call Henry Kanegsberg, the NBC executive in 
charge of choosing a new site for the network’s headquarters. 
We’ve been courting NBC for more than a year, trying to get 
them to move to our West Side yards site—seventy-eight acres 
along the Hudson River that I bought a year ago and on which 
I’ve announced plans to build the world’s tallest building. 

I know Henry has just been shown our latest plans for the 
site, and I’m following up. I mention that Bloomingdale’s is 
dying to become the anchor store in our shopping center, 
which will give it real prestige. I also tell him the city seems 
very excited about our latest plans. Then I say we expect to 
get our preliminary approvals in the next several months. 

Kanegsberg seems enthusiastic. Before I get off, I also put 
in a plug for NBC’s locating its offices in the world’s tallest 
building. “Think about it,” I say. “It’s the ultimate symbol.” 

5:45 p.m. My nine-year-old son, Donny, calls to ask when I’ll 
be home. I always take calls from my kids, no matter what I’m 
doing. I have two others—Ivanka, six, and Eric, three—and as 
they get older, being a father gets easier. I adore them all, but 
I’ve never been great at playing with toy trucks and dolls. 
Now, though, Donny is beginning to get interested in 
buildings and real estate and sports, and that’s great. 

I tell Donny I’ll be home as soon as I can, but he insists on 
a time. Perhaps he’s got my genes: the kid won’t take no for 
an answer. 

6:30 p.m. After several more calls, I leave the office and take 



the elevator upstairs to my apartment in the residential part of 
Trump Tower. Of course, I have a tendency to make a few 
more calls when I get home. 



TUESDAY 


9:00 a.m. I call Ivan Boesky. Boesky is an arbitrageur, but he 
and his wife are also the majority owners of the Beverly Hills 
Hotel and I’ve just read that he’s decided to sell it. I have no 
idea when I call that just two weeks from now Boesky will 
plead guilty to insider trading, and that the real reason he’s 
eager to sell the hotel is that he needs to raise cash fast. 

My idea is to hire Steve Rubell and Ian Schrager, the 
creators of Studio 54 and the Palladium, to run the Beverly 
Hills Hotel for me. Steve’s an incredible promoter, and he’d 
make the hotel hot as hell again. I get Boesky and tell him I’m 
very interested. He tells me Morgan Stanley and Company is 
handling the deal, and I will get a call from their people 
shortly. 

I like Los Angeles. I spent a lot of weekends there during 
the 1970s, and I always stayed at the Beverly Hills. But I 
won’t let my personal preferences affect my business 
judgment. Much as I like the hotel, I’m interested in it only if I 
can get it for a much better price than they’re now asking. 

9:30 a.m. Alan Greenberg calls. We’ve bought another 
100,000 shares of Holiday, and the stock is up another point 
and a half. Trading is very active. I tell Alan I’ve heard that 
the top guys at Holiday are in a panic and that they’re holding 
emergency meetings to discuss how to react to me. Alan says 
that he thinks Holiday will enact some kind of “poison pill” as 
a way of fending off any attempts I make at a hostile takeover. 



Our call lasts less than two minutes. That’s one thing I love 
about Alan: he never wastes time. 

10:00am I meet with the contractors in charge of building 
my 2,700-space parking garage and transportation center 
across the street from Trump Plaza on the Boardwalk in 
Atlantic City. It’s a $30 million job, and they’re here to give 
me a progress report. They tell me we’re on schedule and 
under budget. 

The garage will be ready in time for Memorial Day, 1987— 
the biggest weekend of the year in Atlantic City—and it’s 
going to increase our business enormously. Right now we are 
doing well with virtually no parking. The new lot is located at 
the end of the main road leading to the Boardwalk, and it’s 
connected by a walkway to our casino. Anyone who parks in 
the garage funnels directly into our facility. 

11:00 am I meet with a top New York banker at my office. 
He’s come to try to solicit business, and we have a general talk 
about deals I’m considering. It’s funny what’s happened: 
bankers now come to me, to ask if I might be interested in 
borrowing their money. They know a safe bet. 

12:15 p.m. Norma comes in and tells me that we have to 
switch the Wollman Rink press conference from Thursday to 
Wednesday. Henry Stern, the New York City parks 
commissioner, has a conflict: on Thursday he is also 
scheduled to dedicate a new Central Park playground on the 
Upper West Side, underwritten by Diana Ross, the singer. 



The problem is that there’s no way we can move our 
concrete-pouring, which was why we called the press 
conference in the first place. But what the hell? I’ll wing it and 
things will work out. I’m reluctant to give Henry a hard time. 
Last week, my security force refused to let him into Wollman 
without my written permission. This was taking good security 
a step too far. As you can imagine, Henry wasn’t thrilled. 

12:45 p.m. Jack Mitnik, my accountant, calls to discuss the tax 
implications of a deal we’re doing. I ask him how bad he 
thinks the new federal tax law is going to be for real estate, 
since it eliminates a lot of current real estate write-offs. 

To my surprise, Mitnik tells me he thinks the law is an 
overall plus for me, since much of my cash flow comes from 
casinos and condominiums and the top tax rate on earned 
income is being dropped from 50 to 32 percent. However, I 
still believe the law will be a disaster for the country, since it 
eliminates the incentives to invest and build—particularly in 
secondary locations, where no building will occur unless there 
are incentives. 

1:30 p.m. I tell Norma to call John Danforth, the Republican 
senator from Missouri. I don’t know Danforth personally, but 
he’s one of the few senators who fought hard against the new 
tax bill. It’s probably too late, but I just want to congratulate 
him on having the courage of his convictions, even though it 
might cost him politically. 

Danforth isn’t in, but his secretary says he’ll call back. 



1:45 p.m. Norma sees an opening between calls, and she 
comes in to ask me about several invitations. Dave Winfield, 
the New York Yankee outfielder, has asked me to be the 
chairman of a dinner to benefit his foundation, which fights 
drug abuse. I’m already chairing two dinners this month, one 
for United Cerebral Palsy and the other for the Police Athletic 
League. 

I don’t kid myself about why I’m asked to speak at or chair 
so many events. It’s not because I’m such a great guy. The 
reason is that the people who run charities know that I’ve got 
wealthy friends and can get them to buy tables. I understand 
the game, and while I don’t like to play it, there is no graceful 
way out. However, I’ve already hit up my friends twice this 
month—and there’s only so many times you can ask people to 
donate $10,000 for a table. I tell Norma to turn Winfield 
down, with regrets. 

The other invitation is from the Young President’s 
Organization, asking me to speak at a dinner they’re having. 
YPO admits businessmen under the age of forty who are chief 
executives of their companies. I turned forty two months ago, 
so in their eyes, I guess I now qualify as an elder statesman. 

Norma also asks me about a half dozen party invitations. I 
say yes to two One is being given by Alice Mason, the real 
estate broker who has managed to turn herself into a major 
socialite by getting the hottest people to come to her parties. 
The other is a reception for two wonderful people, Barbara 



Walters of ABC and Merv Adelson, the head of Lorimar- 
Telepictures, who were married a few months ago in 
California. 

Frankly, I’m not too big on parties, because I can’t stand 
small talk. Unfortunately, they’re part of doing business, so I 
find myself going to more than I’d like—and then trying hard 
to leave early. A few, fortunately, I enjoy. But more often I 
will accept an invitation many months in advance, thinking the 
date is so far off that it will never arrive. When it does, I get 
mad at myself for having accepted in the first place. By then 
it’s usually too late to pull out. 

2:00 p.m. I get an idea and call Alan Greenberg again. My idea 
is based on the fact that if I make a takeover move against 
Holiday, I have to get licensed as a casino operator in Nevada, 
where Holiday owns two casinos. “What do you think,” I ask 
him, “about just selling out Holiday shares right now, taking a 
profit, and then rethinking a takeover bid after I get licensed?” 

Alan argues for holding tight with what we’ve got. I say 
okay, for now. I like to keep as many options open as I can. 

2:15 p.m. John Danforth calls back. We have a nice talk, and I 
tell him to keep up the good work. 

2:30 pm I return a call from one of the owners of the Dunes 
Hotel in Las Vegas. They also own perhaps the best 
undeveloped site on the Vegas strip. For the right price, I’d 
consider buying it. 



I like the casino business. I like the scale, which is huge, I 
like the glamour, and most of all, I like the cash flow. If you 
know what you are doing and you run your operation 
reasonably well, you can make a very nice profit. If you run it 
very well, you can make a ton of money. 

2:45 p.m. My brother, Robert, and Harvey Freeman, both 
executive vice presidents in my company, stop by to report on 
a meeting they’ve had that day with Con Edison and 
executives from NBC about the West Side yards project. Con 
Ed has a large smokestack on the southern end of the site, and 
the meeting was to discuss whether the fumes from the stack 
would dissipate as effectively if a large building goes up 
adjacent to it. 

Robert, who is two years younger than I am, is soft-spoken 
and easygoing, but he’s very talented and effective. I think it 
must be hard to have me for a brother, but he’s never said 
anything about it and we’re very close. He is definitely the 
only guy in my life whom I ever call “honey.” 

Robert gets along with almost everyone, which is great for 
me, since I sometimes have to be the bad guy. Harvey is a 
different type: no-nonsense, not too big on laughs, but he’s 
got an absolutely brilliant analytic mind. 

The Con Ed people, I’m happy to hear, told the NBC 
executives that there is no reason to believe the presence of the 
NBC building will affect the smokestack. Unfortunately, Con 
Ed won’t be the last word. Before we can get our approvals, 



we’ll have to get an independent environmental-impact 
statement. 

3:15 p.m. I call Herbert Sturz of the City Planning 
Commission, which will be the first city agency to approve or 
disapprove our latest plan for the West Side yards. Sturz and 
his people are scheduled to have a preliminary look on Friday. 

He isn’t in, so I leave a message with his secretary. I just 
say I’m looking forward to seeing him Friday morning. 

3:20 p.m. Gerald Schrager calls. Jerry’s a top attorney at 
Dreyer & Traub, one of the best real estate firms in the 
country, and he’s handled nearly every one of my major deals 
since I bought the Commodore Hotel back in 1974. Jerry is 
more than an attorney. He’s an absolute business machine, 
and he can see through to the essence of a deal as fast as 
anyone I know. 

We talk about the Holiday Inns situation and several other 
deals that are in various stages. Like Alan Greenberg, 
Schrager isn’t big on wasting time. We cover a half dozen 
subjects in less than ten minutes. 

3:30 p.m. My wife, Ivana, stops in to say good-bye. She’s on 
her way to Atlantic City, by helicopter. I like to kid her that 
she works harder than I do. Last year, when I bought my 
second casino from the Hilton Corporation and renamed it 
Trump’s Castle, I decided to put Ivana in charge. She’s 
incredibly good at anything she’s ever done, a natural 
manager. 



Ivana grew up in Czechoslovakia, an only child. Her father 
was an electrical engineer and a very good athlete, and he 
started Ivana skiing very early. By the age of six she was 
winning medals, and in 1972 she was an alternate on the 
Czechoslovakian ski team at the Sapporo Winter Olympics. A 
year later, after graduating from Charles University in Prague, 
she moved to Montreal and very quickly became one of the 
top models in Canada. 

We met at the Montreal Summer Olympic Games in August 

1976. I’d dated a lot of different women by then, but I’d 
never gotten seriously involved with any of them. Ivana 
wasn’t someone you dated casually. Ten months later, in April 

1977, we were married. Almost immediately, I gave her 
responsibility for the interior decorating on the projects I had 
under way. She did a great job. 

Ivana may be the most organized person I know. In 
addition to raising three children, she runs our three homes— 
the apartment in Trump Tower, Mar-a-Lago, and our home in 
Greenwich, Connecticut—and now she also manages Trump’s 
Castle, which has approximately 4,000 employees. 

The Castle is doing great, but I still give Ivana a hard time 
about the fact that it’s not yet number one. I tell her she’s got 
the biggest facility in town, so by all rights it should be the 
most profitable. Ivana is almost as competitive as I am and she 
insists she’s at a disadvantage with the Castle. She says she 
needs more suites. She isn’t concerned that building the suites 



will cost $40 million. All she knows is that not having them is 
hurting her business and making it tougher for her to be 
number one. I’ll say this much: I wouldn’t bet against her. 

* * * 

3:45 p.m. The executive vice president for marketing at the 
Cadillac Division of General Motors is on the phone. He’s 
calling at the suggestion of his boss, John Gretenberger, the 
president of the Cadillac Motors Division whom I know from 
Palm Beach. Cadillac, it turns out, is interested in cooperating 
in the production of a new superstretch limousine that would 
be named the Trump Golden Series. I like the idea. We set a 
date to sit down and talk in two weeks. 

4:00 p.m. Daniel Lee, a casino analyst for Drexel Burnham 
Lambert, stops by with several of his colleagues to discuss 
being my investment bankers on a deal to purchase a hotel 
company. 

Michael Milken, the guy who invented junk-bond financing 
at Drexel, has called me regularly for the last several years to 
try to get me to bring my business to Drexel. I have no idea 
that Drexel is about to get enmeshed in the insider-trading 
scandal that will soon rock Wall Street. In any case, I happen 
to think Mike’s a brilliant guy. However, Alan Greenberg is 
exceptional himself, and I’m loyal to people who’ve done 
good work for me. 

I hear Lee and his guys out on their deal, but in truth, it 
doesn’t excite me much. We leave it that I’ll get back to them. 



5:00 p.m. Larry Csonka, former running back for the Miami 
Dolphins, calls. He has an idea for keeping the USFL alive. 
He wants to merge it with the Canadian Football League. 
Larry’s both a bright and a nice guy, and he’s very 
enthusiastic, but he doesn’t convince me. If the USFL 
couldn’t get off the ground with players like Herschel Walker 
and Jim Kelly, how is Canadian football, with a lot of players 
nobody has heard of, going to help? We’ve got to win in the 
courts first, to break up the NFL monopoly. 

5:30 p.m. I call Calvin Klein, the designer, to congratulate him. 
Back when Trump Tower first opened, Klein took a full floor 
of offices for his new perfume line, Obsession. It did so well 
that within a year, he expanded to a second floor. Now he’s 
doing better than ever, and so he’s taking over a third floor. 

I have a lot of admiration for Calvin, and I tell him so. He’s 
a very talented designer, but he’s also a very good salesman 
and businessman—and it’s the combination of those qualities 
that makes him so successful. 

6:00 p.m. I draft a letter to Paul Goldberger, architecture critic 
of the New York Times . A week ago, in a Sunday column, 
Goldberger gave a great review to the design of Battery Park 
City, the new development in lower Manhattan. He also called 
it “a stunning contrast” to what he claimed we’re doing with 
the Television City project at the West Side yards. In other 
words, he killed us. 

There’s just one catch: we’re in the middle of designing our 



project with new architects and concepts, and nobody— 
including Goldberger—has seen our new plan. He was 
knocking a design he hadn’t even looked at yet. 

“Dear Paul,” I write. “Your recent article is an obvious 
‘setup’ in preparation for the negative review you intend to do 
on Television City—no matter how great it is. Just think, if 
you are negative enough (which I am sure you will be) you 
might even help convince NBC to move to New Jersey.” 

My people keep telling me I shouldn’t write letters like this 
to critics. The way I see it, critics get to say what they want to 
about my work, so why shouldn’t I be able to say what I want 
to about theirs? 



WEDNESDAY 


9:00 a.m. I go with Ivana to look at a private school for my 
daughter. If you had told me five years ago that I’d be 
spending mornings looking at kindergarten classrooms, I 
would have laughed. 

11:00 a.m. I have a press conference for the Wo liman Rink. 
When I get there, I’m amazed. There are at least twenty 
reporters and photographers milling around. 

Henry Stern, the parks commissioner, goes to the 
microphone first and he is very complimentary to me. He says 
that if the city had tried to undertake the current renovation by 
itself, “we would now be awaiting Board of Estimate approval 
for what Donald Trump has already done.” 

When it’s my turn, I explain that we’ve laid twenty-two 
miles of pipes, that they’ve all been thoroughly tested and 
there are no leaks, that the project is ahead of schedule by at 
least a month, and under budget by about $400,000. I also 
announce that we’ve set a grand opening for November 13— 
and that we have a show planned for that day which will 
include most of the world’s great skaters. 

After I finish, the reporters ask a million questions. Finally 
Henry and I step down into the rink. If we can’t have a real 
concrete-pouring, at least we’ll have a ceremonial one. A 
couple of workmen pull over a wheelbarrow full of wet 
concrete and point it down toward us. Henry and I shovel 



some concrete onto the pipes while the photographers click 
away. 

As many times as I’ve done these things, I have to say I still 
find them a little ridiculous. Think of it: a couple of guys in 
pinstripe suits shoveling wet concrete. But I like to be 
accommodating. As long as they want to shoot, I’ll shovel. 

12:45 p.m. The minute I get back to my office, I start returning 
calls. I want to get as much done as I can now, because I have 
to leave early for Trenton, to attend a retirement dinner for a 
member of the New Jersey Casino Control Commission. 

The first person I call back is Arthur Barron, the president 
of Gulf & Western’s entertainment group, which includes 
Paramount Pictures. Martin Davis, the chairman of G&W, has 
been my friend for a long time, and Barron apparently called 
in response to a letter I wrote to Marty two weeks ago. In the 
letter I explained to Marty that I’d recently purchased a 
fantastic site and was in the midst of designing a building with 
eight motion picture theaters at its base, and I wondered if he 
might be interested in making a deal for them. 

“As you are aware,” I wrote, “there is no one I would rather 
do business with than Marty Davis.” 

That happened to be true, for Martin Davis is a truly 
talented man, but there are also a dozen other companies who 
would kill to have eight theaters in a top location. In other 
words, if I can’t make a deal I like with Marty, I’ve got a lot 
of other options. 



As I anticipated, when I get Art Barron on the phone, he 
wants to set up a meeting to discuss the theaters. We make a 
date for the following week. 

1:30 pm I return a call from Arthur Sonnenblick, one of the 
city’s leading brokers. Three weeks ago, Arthur called to say 
he had some foreign clients who were interested in buying the 
West Side yards. He wouldn’t tell me their names, but he said 
they were serious people, and they were prepared to make me 
a very substantial offer for the site—far more than the $100 
million I paid a year ago. 

I didn’t get too excited. On the contrary, I say to Arthur, 
“The bid sounds low. If you can get them higher, I might be 
interested.” Now Arthur’s calling to give me a status report. 

The truth is, I really don’t want to sell the yards at any 
price. To me, those one hundred acres overlooking the 
Hudson River are the best undeveloped real estate site in the 
world. On the other hand, I don’t want to rule out anything. 
Arthur tells me his clients are still very interested, that they 
may come up a little, but he doubts they’ll go much higher. 
“Keep pushing,” I tell him. 

2:00 p.m. The contractor who’s building my pool at Mar-a- 
Lago is on the phone. I’m busy, but I take the call anyway. 
We’re going to great lengths to build a pool in keeping with 
the original design of the house, and I want to make sure 
every detail is right. 

Buying Mar-a-Lago was a great deal even though I bought 



it to live in, not as a real estate investment. Mar-a-Lago was 
built in the early 1920s by Marjorie Merriweather Post, the 
heiress to the Post cereal fortune and, at the time, Mrs. Edward 
F. Hutton. Set on twenty acres that face both the Atlantic 
Ocean and Lake Worth, the house took four years to build and 
has 118 rooms. Three boatloads of Dorian stone were brought 
from Italy for the exterior walls, and 36,000 Spanish tiles 
dating back to the fifteenth century were used on the exterior 
and the interior. 

When Mrs. Post died she gave the house to the federal 
government for use as a presidential retreat. The government 
eventually gave the house back to the Post Foundation, and 
the foundation put it up for sale at an asking price of $25 
million. I first looked at Mar-a-Lago while vacationing in 
Palm Beach in 1982. Almost immediately I put in a bid of $15 
million, and it was promptly rejected. Over the next few years, 
the foundation signed contracts with several other buyers at 
higher prices than I’d offered, only to have them fall through 
before closing. Each time that happened, I put in another bid, 
but always at a lower sum than before. 

Finally, in late 1985, I put in a cash offer of $5 million, plus 
another $3 million for the furnishings in the house. 
Apparently, the foundation was tired of broken deals. They 
accepted my offer, and we closed one month later. The day 
the deal was announced, the Palm Beach Daily News ran a 

huge front-page story with the headline MAR-A-LAGO’S BARGAIN PRICE 


ROCKS COMMUNITY. 



Soon, several far more modest estates on property a fraction 
of Mar-a-Lago’s size sold for prices in excess of $18 million. 
I’ve been told that the furnishings in Mar-a-Lago alone are 
worth more than I paid for the house. It just goes to show that 
it pays to move quickly and decisively when the time is right. 
Upkeep of Mar-a-Lago, of course, isn’t cheap. For what it 
costs each year, you could buy a beautiful home almost 
anywhere else in America. 

All of which is a long way of explaining why I take this call 
from the pool contractor. He has a small question about the 
matching of the Dorian stone we’re using for the decking and 
I care about every detail when it comes to Mar-a-Lago. The 
call takes two minutes, but it will probably save two days of 
work—and ensure that the job doesn’t have to be ripped out 
and done over later. 

2:30 p.m. A prominent businessman who does a lot of 
business with the Soviet Union calls to keep me posted on a 
construction project I’m interested in undertaking in Moscow. 
The idea got off the ground after I sat next to the Soviet 
ambassador, Yuri Dubinin, at a luncheon held by Leonard 
Lauder, a great businessman who is the son of Estee Lauder. 
Dubinin’s daughter, it turned out, had read about Trump 
Tower and knew all about it. One thing led to another, and 
now I’m talking about building a large luxury hotel, across the 
street from the Kremlin, in partnership with the Soviet 
government. They have asked me to go to Moscow in July. 



3:00 p.m. Robert stops in, and we talk about several issues 
relating to NBC and the West Side yards. 

3:30 p.m. A friend from Texas calls, to tell me about a deal 
he’s got working. He happens to be a very charming guy— 
wonderful looking, wonderfully dressed, with one of those 
great Texas drawls that make you feel very comfortable. He 
calls me Donny, a name that I hate, but which he says in a 
way that somehow makes it okay. 

Two years ago, this same friend called me about another 
deal. He was trying to put together a group of wealthy people 
to take over a small oil company. “Donny,” he said, “I want 
you to invest fifty million. This is a no-lose proposition. 
You’ll double or triple your money in a matter of months.” He 
gave me all the details, and it sounded very good. I was all set 
to go forward. The papers were being drawn up, and then one 
morning I woke up and it just didn’t feel right. 

I called my friend back and I said, “Listen, there’s 
something about this that bothers me. Maybe it’s that oil is 
underground, and I can’t see it, or maybe it’s that there’s 
nothing creative about it. In any case, I just don’t want to go 
in.” And he said, “Okay, Donny, it’s up to you, but you’re 
missing a great opportunity.” The rest is history, of course. Oil 
went completely to hell several months later, the company his 
group bought went bankrupt, and his investors lost every 
dime they put up. 

That experience taught me a few things. One is to listen to 



your gut, no matter how good something sounds on paper. 
The second is that you’re generally better off sticking with 
what you know. And the third is that sometimes your best 
investments are the ones you don’t make. 

Because I held back, I saved $50 million and the two of us 
have remained friends. As a result, I don’t want to reject him 
outright on his new deal. Instead, I tell him to send up the 
papers. In reality, I’m not too likely to get involved. 

4:00 p.m. I call back Judith Krantz. You’ve got to give it to 
her: how many authors have written three number-one best¬ 
selling books in a row? She also happens to be a very nice 
woman. Trump Tower is the setting for her latest novel, I’ll 
Take Manhattan, and I’m a character in the book. At Judy’s 
request, I agreed to play the role of myself in a scene from the 
miniseries based on her book, and filmed at Trump Tower. 

Now Judy is calling to say that the scene, with Valerie 
Bertinelli, came off well. I’m happy to hear it, although I’m 
not about to quit my day job. Still, I figure it’s not a bad way 
to promote Trump Tower—on national television, in a 
miniseries that runs during sweeps week and is virtually 
guaranteed to get huge national ratings. 

4:30 p.m. My last call is to Paul Hallingby, a partner at Bear 
Stearns who handled the $550 million in bond issues we did 
successfully for our two casinos in Atlantic City during 1985. 

Now we’re talking about setting up something called the 
Trump Fund, through which we’d buy distressed and 



foreclosed real estate, particularly in the Southwest, at bargain- 
basement prices. 

Hallingby tells me that he’s putting together a prospectus, 
and that he’s confident we’ll easily be able to raise $500 
million in a public offering. What I like about the deal is that 
I’d retain a large equity position in any purchase we made, but 
I wouldn’t be at any personal risk, in the event that any of the 
deals went bad. What I don’t like is the idea of competing 
with myself. What happens, for example, if I see a piece of 
distressed property that I want to buy on my own but that 
might also be good for the fund? 

In any case, I’ll look at the prospectus. 

* * * 

5:00pm I’ m driven to the 60th Street heliport, in time to 

catch a helicopter and be in Trenton for cocktails at 5:30 pm. 



THURSDAY 


9:00 am. I sit down with Abe Hirschfeld. Basically, Abe feels 
hurt that Governor Cuomo personally led a fight to push him 
off the ballot. I tell Abel understand how he feels, but that the 
governor is a good guy, and that in any event it would look 
ridiculous for Abe, who is a Democrat, to suddenly turn 
around now and endorse a Republican. I also point out that as 
a practical matter, Cuomo is going to win re-election by a 
landslide, and that it’s a lot better to side with a winner than a 
loser. 

Abe is a pretty stubborn guy, but finally he says, “Look, 
why don’t you get the governor to call me?” I tell him I’ll do 
my best. Abe has always been considered difficult. But I like 
him and his family a lot. 

10:15 a.m. Alan Greenberg calls. The market is down 25 points 
less than an hour after opening. Alan tells me everyone’s a 
seller, that nearly all stocks are down, but that Holiday is 
holding firm. I can’t decide whether I should be happy or sad. 
Part of me wants Holiday to drop off, so I can buy more at a 
better price. The other part of me wants it to go up, because at 
this point, every time the stock rises a point, I make a lot of 
easy money. 

* * * 

10:30 a.m. Harvey Myerson, the attorney who handled our 
USFL antitrust case, comes in for a meeting. Harvey is an 



incredible trial lawyer. He took a case in which no one gave us 
a prayer going in, and he managed to win on antitrust 
grounds, even though we were awarded only token damages. 

Even so, I’ve wondered, since the trial, whether perhaps 
Harvey was just a little too sharp for some of the jurors. Every 
day he’d show up in one of his beautiful pinstripe suits, with a 
little handkerchief in his pocket, and I’m just not sure how 
well that went over. 

Overall, I think he did as good a job as anyone could, and I 
still believe he’s our best hope on the appeal. One thing I like 
about Harvey is his enthusiasm. He’s still absolutely 
convinced he’s going to win the appeal. 

11:30 a.m. Stephen Hyde calls. After I bought out Holiday 
Inns’ interest in the Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic 
City and took over the management in June, I hired Steve to 
run the facility. Steve had been working as a vice president for 
Stephen A. Wynn at the Golden Nugget. Wynn is one of the 
best gaming guys around, and my philosophy is always to 
hire the best from the best. After a long-running negotiation, I 
offered Hyde a bigger job and more money, and he said yes. I 
think he also liked the idea of working for me, and he didn’t 
mind leaving Steve Wynn. 

Wynn is very slick and smooth, but he’s also a very strange 
guy. A couple of weeks ago, he called and said, “Donald, I 
just wanted to let you know that my wife and I are getting 
divorced.” So I said, “Oh, I’m sorry to hear that, Steve.” He 



said, “Oh, don’t be sorry, it’s great, we’re still in love, it’s just 
that we don’t want to be married anymore. In fact, she’s right 
here with me. Do you want to say hello?” I politely declined. 

Hyde is calling to report on the August figures for the 
Plaza, which just came in. He tells me that gross operating 
profit was just over $9,038,000 compared with $3,438,000 
for the same period a year ago, when I was still partners with 
Holiday Inns, and they were managing the facility. 

“Not too bad,” I say to Steve, “considering we still don’t 
have any parking.” Still, I can’t resist razzing him a little: 
“Now all you’ve got to do is get the hotel in mint condition.” 
I’m a stickler for cleanliness, and last time I visited the hotel, I 
wasn’t totally happy. 

“We’re working on it, Donald,” Steve says good-naturedly. 
“It’s already improving.” 

12:00 noon I walk over to the Wollman Rink, to watch the 
pouring of the concrete. This morning all of the papers had 
stories about our press conference. 

When I get to the rink, it’s surrounded by a convoy of 
cement trucks lined up as if they’re in a military operation. 
HRH, the construction company in charge of the project, has 
done a fantastic job moving things along, but this has to be the 
most incredible sight yet: thousands of pounds of wet concrete 
being poured from truck after truck into this huge rink. It’s 
like watching the world’s biggest cake get iced. 



Even though the press conference was yesterday, I notice 
photographers and camera crews all over the place. This is the 
event everyone was waiting for. 

1:30 pm I sit down with a reporter from Fortune who is 
doing a story about real estate and the new tax laws—with me 
on the cover. Contrary to what a lot of people think, I don’t 
enjoy doing press. I’ve been asked the same questions a 
million times now, and I don’t particularly like talking about 
my personal life. Nonetheless, I understand that getting press 
can be very helpful in making deals, and I don’t mind talking 
about them. I just try to be very selective. Norma must turn 
down twenty requests a week from all over the world. Also, 
when I do give an interview, I always keep it short. This 
reporter is in and out in less than twenty minutes. If I didn’t 
limit myself, I could spend my life talking to the press. 

2:45 p.m. A friend of mine, a highly successful and very well 
known painter, calls to say hello and to invite me to an 
opening. I get a great kick out of this guy because, unlike 
some artists I’ve met, he’s totally unpretentious. 

A few months back he invited me to come to his studio. We 
were standing around talking, when all of a sudden he said to 
me, “Do you want to see me earn twenty-five thousand dollars 
before lunch?” “Sure,” I said, having no idea what he meant. 
He picked up a large open bucket of paint and splashed some 
on a piece of canvas stretched on the floor. Then he picked up 
another bucket, containing a different color, and splashed 



some of that on the canvas. He did this four times, and it took 
him perhaps two minutes. When he was done, he turned to me 
and said, “Well, that’s it. I’ve just earned twenty-five thousand 
dollars. Let’s go to lunch.” 

He was smiling, but he was also absolutely serious. His 
point was that plenty of collectors wouldn’t know the 
difference between his two-minute art and the paintings he 
really cares about. They were just interested in buying his 
name. 

I’ve always felt that a lot of modern art is a con, and that the 
most successful painters are often better salesmen and 
promoters than they are artists. I sometimes wonder what 
would happen if collectors knew what I knew about my 
friend’s work that afternoon. The art world is so ridiculous 
that the revelation might even make his paintings more 
valuable! Not that my friend is about to risk finding out. 

4:00 p.m. A group of us meet in our conference room to go 
over the latest plans for the West Side yards project, which 
we’re scheduled to show to the city tomorrow morning. It 
turns out that Herb Sturz of the planning commission won’t 
be able to attend, but his key people will be there. 

There are perhaps fifteen people at this meeting, including 
Robert and Harvey Freeman, and Alexander Cooper and his 
team. Alex is the architect-city planner I hired two months ago 
to take over the design of the project, after it became clear that 
my original architect, Helmut Jahn, just wasn’t making it with 



the city. I don’t know if the reason was his Germanic style, or 
the fact that he is based in Chicago rather than New York, or 
just that he’s a little too slick. I do know that he wasn’t getting 
anywhere with the City Planning Commission. 

Alex, by contrast, was formerly a city planner himself and 
he’s almost a legend in that office. He’s also the guy who 
designed Battery Park City, which has gotten great press. 
Politically, he’s a much better choice than Helmut Jahn, and 
I’m a very practical guy. 

We’ve been meeting like this every week for the past couple 
of months to hash out a broad plan, including where to locate 
the residential buildings, the streets, the parks, and the 
shopping mall. Today Alex has brought preliminary drawings 
of the layout we’ve agreed on. At the southern end are the 
prospective NBC studios, adjacent to the world’s tallest 
building. Then, heading north, there are the residential 
buildings, facing east over a boulevard, and west over a huge 
eight-block-long shopping mall and out at the river. Every 
apartment has a great view, which I believe is critical. 

I am very happy with the new layout, and Alex seems 
happy too. I happen to think that tall buildings are what will 
make this project special, but I’m not naive about zoning. 
Eventually, I know, we’re going to have to make some 
concessions. On the other hand, if the city won’t approve 
something I think makes sense economically, I’ll just wait for 
the next administration and try again. This site is only going to 



get more valuable. 

6:00 pm. I excuse myself, because I am due at an early dinner, 
and it’s not the kind to be late for. Ivana and I have been 
invited, by John Cardinal O’Connor, to have dinner at St. 
Patrick’s Cathedral. 

7:00 p.m. No matter whom you’ve met over the years, there is 
something incredible about sitting down to dinner with the 
cardinal and a half dozen of his top bishops and priests in a 
private dining room at St. Patrick’s Cathedral. It’s hard not to 
be a little awed. 

We talk about politics, the city, real estate, and a half dozen 
other subjects, and it’s a fascinating evening. As we leave, I 
tell Ivana how impressed I am with the cardinal. He’s not only 
a man of great warmth, he’s also a businessman with great 
political instincts. 



FRIDAY 


6:30 am I’ m leafing through the New York Times when I 
come to a huge picture of the concrete being poured onto 
Wollman Rink. It’s on the front page of the second section. 
This story just won’t quit. 

* * * 

9:15 a.m. We meet with the city on the West Side yards 
project. Almost everyone from yesterday’s meeting is there, 
and we are joined by four city planners, including Rebecca 
Robinson and Con Howe, who are directly in charge of 
evaluating our project. 

Alex does the presentation, and he’s very good. Mostly he 
emphasizes the things we know the city is going to like—the 
public parks, the easy access to the waterfront, the ways we’ve 
devised to move traffic in and out. The only time the density 
issue comes up—how tall the buildings will be—Alex just 
says we’re still working it out. 

When it’s over, we all agree it went very well. 

10:30 a.m. I go back to my office for a meeting to discuss 
progress on construction at Trump Parc, the condominium 
I’m building out of the steel shell of the Barbizon-Plaza Hotel 
on Central Park South. It’s an incredible location, and the 
building we’re redoing will be a great success. 

The meeting includes Frank Williams, my architect on the 



project, Andrew Weiss, the project manager, and Blanche 
Sprague, an executive vice president, who is in charge of 
sales. Frank, who is very soft-spoken, is a fine architect. 
Blanchette—my nickname for her—is a classic. She’s got a 
mouth that won’t quit, which is probably why she’s so good 
at sales. I like to tell her that she must be a very tough woman 
to live with. The truth is I get a great kick out of her. 

We start by talking about what color to use on the frames of 
the windows. Details like these make all the difference in the 
look and ambience of a building. After almost a half hour, we 
finally agree on a light beige that will blend right into the color 
of the stone. I happen to like earth tones. They are richer and 
more elegant than primary colors. 

11:00 a.m. Frank Williams leaves, and we turn to a discussion 
of the demolition work at Trump Parc. Andy tells me it’s not 
finished, and that the contractor has just given us a $175,000 
bill for “extras.” Extras are the costs a contractor adds to his 
original bid every time you request any change in the plan you 
initially agreed on. You have to be very rough and very tough 
with most contractors or they’ll take the shirt right off your 
back. 

I pick up the phone and dial the guy in charge of demolition 
at Trump Parc. “Steve,” I say when I get him, “this is Donald 
Trump. Listen, you’ve got to get your ass moving and get 
finished. You’re behind. I want you to get personally 
involved in this.” He starts to give me explanations but I cut 



him off. “I don’t want to know. I just want you to get the job 
done and get out. And listen, Steve, you’re killing me on these 
extras. I don’t want you to deal with Andy anymore on the 
extras. I want you to deal with me personally. If you try 
screwing me on this job, you won’t be getting a second 
chance. I’ll never hire you again.” 

My second concern is the laying of floors. I ask Andy for 
the number of our concrete guy. “Okay,” I say, only half 
joking, “I’m going to take my life in my hands now.” 
Concrete guys can be extremely rough. I get the number-two 
guy on the line. “Look,” I say to him, “your boss wanted this 
contract very badly. I was set to give it to someone else, but he 
told me he’d do a great job. I walked the site yesterday, and 
the patches you’re making aren’t level with the existing 
concrete. In some places, they’re as much as a quarter-inch 
off.” 

The guy doesn’t have any response, so I keep talking. 
“Nobody has the potential to give you more work in the future 
than Trump. I’m going to be building when everyone else has 
gone bust. So do me a favor. Get this thing done right.” 

This time the guy has a response. “Every guy on the job is a 
pro,” he says. “We’ve given you our best men, Mr. Trump.” 

“Good,” I say. “Call me later and let me know how you’re 
doing.” 

12:00 noon Alan Greenberg calls to tell me that Holiday has 
gone ahead and enacted some “poison pill” provisions that 



will weigh the company down with debt and make it much 
less attractive as a takeover target. I’m not worried. No poison 
pill is going to keep me from going after Holiday Inn, if that’s 
what I decide I want to do. 

The market is still taking a drubbing. It was off 80 points 
yesterday, and it’s down another 25 today. But Holiday is off 
only a point. Alan tells me that we’ve now bought almost 5 
percent of the company. 

* * * 

12:15 p.m. Blanche stays on after Andy leaves to get me to 
choose a print advertisement for Trump Parc She shows me a 
half dozen choices, and I don’t like any of them. She is 
furious. 

Blanche wants to use a line drawing that shows the building 
and its panoramic views of Central Park. “I like the idea of a 
line drawing,” I tell her. “But I don’t like these. Also, I want a 
drawing that shows more of the building. Central Park is 
great, but in the end I’m not selling a park, I’m selling a 
building and apartments.” 

12:30 p.m. Norma comes in, carrying a huge pile of forms I 
have to sign as part of my application for a Nevada gaming 
license. While I’m signing, Norma asks who I want to use as 
character references. I think for a minute, and tell her to put 
down General Pete Dawkins, a great Army football hero, a 
terrific guy, and a good friend who’s now an investment 
banker at Shearson; Benjamin Hollaway, chairman and CEO 



of Equitable Real Estate Group; and Conrad Stephenson of 
Chase Manhattan Bank. 

“Also,” I tell Norma, “put down John Cardinal O’Connor.” 

12:45 p.m. Ivana rings. She’s in the office and wants me to go 
with her to see another school we’re considering sending our 
daughter to next fall. “Come on, Donald,” she says. “You 
haven’t got anything else to do.” Sometimes I think she really 
believes it. 

“Actually, honey, I’m a little busy right now,” I tell her. It 
doesn’t work. Three minutes later she’s in my office, tugging 
at my sleeve. I finish signing the forms, and we go. 

2:30 p.m. Bill Fugazy calls. I like to call him Willie the Fug, 
but he doesn’t seem to appreciate it. Fugazy’s business is 
limousines, but he really should have been a broker. The guy 
knows everyone. He’s one of Fee Iacocca’s best friends, and 
he’s the person who recommended to the cardinal that he meet 
with me to discuss real estate and get to know each other 
better. 

Fugazy asks me how dinner went last night at St. Pat’s and I 
tell him it was great. Before we hang up, we set a golf date for 
the weekend. 

2:45 p.m. John D’Alessio, the construction manager on my 
triplex in Trump Tower, comes by to discuss the progress. He 
is carrying drawings. Except for the third floor, where the kids 
are, and the roof, where someday I’m going to build a park 



sixty-eight stories up, I’ve gutted the whole apartment. In 
truth, I’ve gone a little overboard. First of all, I practically 
doubled the size of what I have by taking over the adjacent 
apartment. What I’m doing is about as close as you’re going 
to get, in the twentieth century, to the quality of Versailles. 
Everything is made to order. For example, we had the finest 
craftsmen in Italy hand-carve twenty-seven solid marble 
columns for the living room. They arrived yesterday, and 
they’re beautiful. I can afford the finest workmanship, and 
when it comes to my own apartment, I figure, why spare any 
expense? I want the best, whatever it takes. 

I look over the drawings with John and mark up a few 
changes. Then I ask him how the job is going. “Not bad,” he 
said. “We’re getting there.” 

“Well, push, John,” I say. “Push hard.” 

3:30 p.m. A Greek shipping magnate is on the line. “How’s 
the shipping business?” I ask. He tells me he has a deal he’d 
like to discuss. He doesn’t say what it is, but with certain 
people you don’t ask. If it wasn’t big, I assume he wouldn’t 
waste my time. We set a date. 

4:00 p.m. I get a call from a guy who sells and leases corporate 
airplanes. I’ve been considering buying a G-4, the jet that 
most corporations use. I tell the guy on the phone that I’m still 
interested in a plane, but that he should keep his eye out for a 
727, which is what I really want. 

4:30 p.m. Nick Ribis calls from Australia. He tells me things 



are going very well on our negotiations to be designated 
builder and operator of the world’s largest casino. Nick fills 
me in on the details and says that we should know more by 
the following Monday. “Sounds great,” I tell him. “Call me 
before you fly back.” 

4:45 p.m. Norma tells me that David Letterman, the talk-show 
host, is downstairs in the atrium of Trump Tower, filming a 
day in the life of two out-of-town tourists. He’d like to know 
if they could stop up and say hello. 

I almost never stay up late enough to watch Letterman, but I 
know he’s hot. I say sure. Five minutes later, Letterman walks 
in, along with a cameraman, a couple of assistants, and a very 
nice-looking married couple from Louisville. We kid around a 
little, and I say what a great town I think Louisville is—maybe 
we should all go in together on a deal there. Letterman asks 
me how much an apartment goes for in Trump Tower. I tell 
him that he might be able to pick up a one-bedroom for $1 
million. 

“Tell me the truth,” Letterman says after a few minutes of 
bantering. “It’s Friday afternoon, you get a call from us out of 
the blue, you tell us we can come up. Now you’re standing 
here talking to us. You must not have much to do.” 

“Truthfully, David,” I say, “you’re right. Absolutely 
nothing to do.” 



2 

TRUMP CARDS 


The Elements of the Deal 


M y style of deal-making is quite simple and 
straightforward. I aim very high, and then I just keep 
pushing and pushing and pushing to get what I’m 
after. Sometimes I settle for less than I sought, but in most 
cases I still end up with what I want. 

More than anything else, I think deal-making is an ability 
you’re born with. It’s in the genes. I don’t say that 
egotistically. It’s not about being brilliant. It does take a 
certain intelligence, but mostly it’s about instincts. You can 
take the smartest kid at Wharton, the one who gets straight A’s 
and has a 170 IQ, and if he doesn’t have the instincts, he’ll 
never be a successful entrepreneur. 

Moreover, most people who do have the instincts will never 
recognize that they do, because they don’t have the courage or 
the good fortune to discover their potential. Somewhere out 
there are a few men with more innate talent at golf than Jack 
Nicklaus, or women with greater ability at tennis than Chris 
Evert or Martina Navratilova, but they will never lift a club or 




swing a racket and therefore will never find out how great 
they could have been. Instead, they’ll be content to sit and 
watch stars perform on television. 

When I look back at the deals I’ve made—and the ones I’ve 
lost or let pass—I see certain common elements. But unlike the 
real estate evangelists you see all over television these days, I 
can’t promise you that by following the precepts I’m about to 
offer you’ll become a millionaire overnight. Unfortunately, 
life rarely works that way, and most people who try to get rich 
quick end up going broke instead. As for those among you 
who do have the genes, who do have the instincts, and who 
could be highly successful, well, I still hope you won’t follow 
my advice. Because that would just make it a much tougher 
world for me. 



Think Big 


I like thinking big. I always have. To me it’s very simple: if 
you’re going to be thinking anyway, you might as well think 
big. Most people think small, because most people are afraid 
of success, afraid of making decisions, afraid of winning. And 
that gives people like me a great advantage. 

My father built low-income and middle-income buildings in 
Brooklyn and Queens, but even then, I gravitated to the best 
location. When I was working in Queens, I always wanted 
Forest Hills. And as I grew older, and perhaps wiser, I 
realized that Forest Hills was great, but Forest Hills isn’t Fifth 
Avenue. And so I began to look toward Manhattan, because at 
a very early age, I had a true sense of what I wanted to do. 

I wasn’t satisfied just to earn a good living. I was looking to 
make a statement. I was out to build something monumental— 
something worth a big effort. Plenty of other people could 
buy and sell little brownstones, or build cookie-cutter red¬ 
brick buildings. What attracted me was the challenge of 
building a spectacular development on almost one hundred 
acres by the river on the West Side of Manhattan, or creating a 
huge new hotel next to Grand Central Station at Park Avenue 
and 42nd Street. 

The same sort of challenge is what attracted me to Atlantic 
City. It’s nice to build a successful hotel. It’s a lot better to 
build a hotel attached to a huge casino that can earn fifty times 
what you’d ever earn renting hotel rooms. You’re talking a 



whole different order of magnitude. 

One of the keys to thinking big is total focus. I think of it 
almost as a controlled neurosis, which is a quality I’ve noticed 
in many highly successful entrepreneurs. They’re obsessive, 
they’re driven, they’re single-minded and sometimes they’re 
almost maniacal, but it’s all channeled into their work. Where 
other people are paralyzed by neurosis, the people I’m talking 
about are actually helped by it. 

I don’t say this trait leads to a happier life, or a better life, 
but it’s great when it comes to getting what you want. This is 
particularly true in New York real estate, where you are 
dealing with some of the sharpest, toughest, and most vicious 
people in the world. I happen to love to go up against these 
guys, and I love to beat them. 



Protect the Downside and the Upside Will Take Care of 

Itself 


People think I’m a gambler. I’ve never gambled in my life. To 
me, a gambler is someone who plays slot machines. I prefer to 
own slot machines. It’s a very good business being the house. 

It’s been said that I believe in the power of positive 
thinking. In fact, I believe in the power of negative thinking. I 
happen to be very conservative in business. I always go into 
the deal anticipating the worst. If you plan for the worst—if 
you can live with the worst—the good will always take care of 
itself. The only time in my life I didn’t follow that rule was 
with the USFL. I bought a losing team in a losing league on a 
long shot. It almost worked, through our antitrust suit, but 
when it didn’t, I had no fallback. The point is that you can’t 
be too greedy. If you go for a home run on every pitch, 
you’re also going to strike out a lot. I try never to leave myself 
too exposed, even if it means sometimes settling for a triple, a 
double, or even, on rare occasions, a single. 

One of the best examples I can give is my experience in 
Atlantic City. Several years ago, I managed to piece together 
an incredible site on the Boardwalk. The individual deals I 
made for parcels were contingent on my being able to put 
together the whole site. Until I achieved that, I didn’t have to 
put up very much money at all. 

Once I assembled the site, I didn’t rush to start construction. 
That meant I had to pay the carrying charges for a longer 



period, but before I spent hundreds of millions of dollars and 
several years on construction, I wanted to make sure I got my 
gaming license. I lost time, but I also kept my exposure much 
lower. 

When I got my licensing on the Boardwalk site, Holiday 
Inns came along and offered to be my partner. Some people 
said, “You don’t need them. Why give up fifty percent of 
your profits?” But Holiday Inns also offered to pay back the 
money I already had in the deal, to finance all the 
construction, and to guarantee me against losses for five years. 
My choice was whether to keep all the risk myself, and own 
100 percent of the casino, or settle for a 50 percent stake 
without putting up a dime. It was an easy decision. 

Barron Hilton, by contrast, took a bolder approach when he 
built his casino in Atlantic City. In order to get opened as 
quickly as possible, he filed for a license and began 
construction on a $400 million facility at the same time. But 
then, two months before the hotel was scheduled to open, 
Hilton was denied a license. He ended up selling to me at the 
last minute, under a lot of pressure, and without a lot of other 
options. I renamed the facility Trump’s Castle and it is now 
one of the most successful hotel-casinos anywhere in the 
world. 



Maximize Your Options 


I also protect myself by being flexible. I never get too attached 
to one deal or one approach. For starters, I keep a lot of balls 
in the air, because most deals fall out, no matter how 
promising they seem at first. In addition, once Fve made a 
deal, I always come up with at least a half dozen approaches to 
making it work, because anything can happen, even to the 
best-laid plans. 

For example, if I hadn’t gotten the approvals I wanted for 
Trump Tower, I could always have built an office tower and 
done just fine. If I’d been turned down for licensing in 
Atlantic City, I could have sold the site I’d assembled to 
another casino operator, at a good profit. 

Perhaps the best example I can give is the first deal I made 
in Manhattan. I got an option to purchase the Penn Central 
railyards at West 34th Street. My original proposal was to 
build middle-income housing on the site, with government 
financing. Unfortunately, the city began to have financial 
problems, and money for public housing suddenly dried up. I 
didn’t spend a lot of time feeling sorry for myself. Instead, I 
switched to my second option and began promoting the site as 
ideal for a convention center. It took two years of pushing and 
promoting, but ultimately the city did designate my site for the 
convention center—and that’s where it was built. 

Of course, if they hadn’t chosen my site, I would have 
come up with a third approach. 



Know Your Market 


Some people have a sense of the market and some people 
don’t. Steven Spielberg has it. Lee Iacocca of Chrysler has it, 
and so does Judith Krantz in her way. Woody Allen has it, for 
the audience he cares about reaching, and so does Sylvester 
Stallone, at the other end of the spectrum. Some people 
criticize Stallone, but you’ve got to give him credit. I mean, 
here’s a man who is just forty-one years old, and he’s already 
created two of the all-time-great characters, Rocky and 
Rambo. To me he’s a diamond-in-the-rough type, a genius 
purely by instinct. He knows what the public wants and he 
delivers it. 

I like to think I have that instinct. That’s why I don’t hire a 
lot of number-crunchers, and I don’t trust fancy marketing 
surveys. I do my own surveys and draw my own conclusions. 
I’m a great believer in asking everyone for an opinion before I 
make a decision. It’s a natural reflex. If I’m thinking of 
buying a piece of property, I’ll ask the people who live nearby 
about the area—what they think of the schools and the crime 
and the shops. When I’m in another city and I take a cab, I’ll 
always make it a point to ask the cabdriver questions. I ask 
and I ask and I ask, until I begin to get a gut feeling about 
something. And that’s when I make a decision. 

I have learned much more from conducting my own 
random surveys than I could ever have learned from the 
greatest of consulting firms. They send a crew of people down 



from Boston, rent a room in New York, and charge you 
$100,000 for a lengthy study. In the end, it has no conclusion 
and takes so long to complete that if the deal you were 
considering was a good one, it will be long gone. 

The other people I don’t take too seriously are the critics— 
except when they stand in the way of my projects. In my 
opinion, they mostly write to impress each other, and they’re 
just as swayed by fashions as anyone else. One week it’s spare 
glass towers they are praising to the skies. The next week, 
they’ve rediscovered old, and they’re celebrating detail and 
ornamentation. What very few of them have is any feeling for 
what the public wants. Which is why, if these critics ever tried 
to become developers, they’d be terrible failures. 

Trump Tower is a building the critics were skeptical about 
before it was built, but which the public obviously liked. I’m 
not talking about the sort of person who inherited money 175 
years ago and lives on 84th Street and Park Avenue. I’m 
taking about the wealthy Italian with the beautiful wife and the 
red Ferrari. Those people—the audience I was after—came to 
Trump Tower in droves. 

The funny thing about Trump Tower is that we ended up 
getting great architectural reviews. The critics didn’t want to 
review it well because it stood for a lot of things they didn’t 
like at the time. But in the end, it was such a gorgeous 
building that they had no choice but to say so. I always follow 
my own instincts, but I’m not going to kid you: it’s also nice 



to get good reviews. 



Use Your Leverage 


The worst thing you can possibly do in a deal is seem 
desperate to make it. That makes the other guy smell blood, 
and then you’re dead. The best thing you can do is deal from 
strength, and leverage is the biggest strength you can have. 
Leverage is having something the other guy wants. Or better 
yet, needs. Or best of all, simply can’t do without. 

Unfortunately, that isn’t always the case, which is why 
leverage often requires imagination, and salesmanship. In 
other words, you have to convince the other guy it’s in his 
interest to make the deal. 

Back in 1974, in an effort to get the city to approve my deal 
to buy the Commodore Hotel on East 42nd Street, I convinced 
its owners to go public with the fact that they were planning to 
close down the hotel. After they made the announcement, I 
wasn’t shy about pointing out to everyone in the city what a 
disaster a boarded-up hotel would be for the Grand Central 
area, and for the entire city. 

When the board of Holiday Inns was considering whether 
to enter into a partnership with me in Atlantic City, they were 
attracted to my site because they believed my construction was 
farther along than that of any other potential partner. In 
reality, I wasn’t that far along, but I did everything I could, 
short of going to work at the site myself, to assure them that 
my casino was practically finished. My leverage came from 
confirming an impression they were already predisposed to 



believe. 

When I bought the West Side railyards, I didn’t name the 
project Television City by accident, and I didn’t choose the 
name because I think it’s pretty. I did it to make a point. 
Keeping the television networks in New York—and NBC in 
particular—is something the city very much wants to do. 
Losing a network to New Jersey would be a psychological 
and economic disaster. 

Leverage: don’t make deals without it. 



Enhance Your Location 


Perhaps the most misunderstood concept in all of real estate is 
that the key to success is location, location, location. Usually, 
that’s said by people who don’t know what they’re talking 
about. First of all, you don’t necessarily need the best location. 
What you need is the best deal. Just as you can create 
leverage, you can enhance a location, through promotion and 
through psychology. 

When you have 57th Street and Fifth Avenue as your 
location, as I did with Trump Tower, you need less 
promotion. But even there, I took it a step further, by 
promoting Trump Tower as something almost larger than life. 
By contrast, Museum Tower, two blocks away and built above 
the Museum of Modern Art, wasn’t marketed well, never 
achieved an “aura,” and didn’t command nearly the prices we 
did at Trump Tower. 

Location also has a lot to do with fashion. You can take a 
mediocre location and turn it into something considerably 
better just by attracting the right people. After Trump Tower I 
built Trump Plaza, on a site at Third Avenue and 61st Street 
that I was able to purchase very inexpensively. The truth is 
that Third Avenue simply didn’t compare with Fifth Avenue 
as a location. But Trump Tower had given a value to the 
Trump name, and I built a very striking building on Third 
Avenue. Suddenly we were able to command premium prices 
from very wealthy and successful people who might have 



chosen Trump Tower if the best apartments hadn’t been sold 
out. Today Third Avenue is a very prestigious place to live, 
and Trump Plaza is a great success. 

My point is that the real money isn’t made in real estate by 
spending the top dollar to buy the best location. You can get 
killed doing that, just as you can get killed buying a bad 
location, even for a low price. What you should never do is 
pay too much, even if that means walking away from a very 
good site. Which is all a more sophisticated way of looking at 
location. 



Get the Word Out 


You can have the most wonderful product in the world, but if 
people don’t know about it, it’s not going to be worth much. 
There are singers in the world with voices as good as Frank 
Sinatra’s, but they’re singing in their garages because no one 
has ever heard of them. You need to generate interest, and you 
need to create excitement. One way is to hire public relations 
people and pay them a lot of money to sell whatever you’ve 
got. But to me, that’s like hiring outside consultants to study a 
market. It’s never as good as doing it yourself. 

One thing I’ve learned about the press is that they’re always 
hungry for a good story, and the more sensational the better. 
It’s in the nature of the job, and I understand that. The point is 
that if you are a little different, or a little outrageous, or if you 
do things that are bold or controversial, the press is going to 
write about you. I’ve always done things a little differently, I 
don’t mind controversy, and my deals tend to be somewhat 
ambitious. Also, I achieved a lot when I was very young, and 
I chose to live in a certain style. The result is that the press has 
always wanted to write about me. 

I’m not saying that they necessarily like me. Sometimes 
they write positively, and sometimes they write negatively. 
But from a pure business point of view, the benefits of being 
written about have far outweighed the drawbacks. It’s really 
quite simple. If I take a full-page ad in the New York Times to 
publicize a project, it might cost $40,000, and in any case, 



people tend to be skeptical about advertising. But if the New 
York Times writes even a moderately positive one-column 
story about one of my deals, it doesn’t cost me anything, and 
it’s worth a lot more than $40,000. 

The funny thing is that even a critical story, which may be 
hurtful personally, can be very valuable to your business. 
Television City is a perfect example. When I bought the land 
in 1985, many people, even those on the West Side, didn’t 
realize that those one hundred acres existed. Then I announced 
I was going to build the world’s tallest building on the site. 
Instantly, it became a media event: the New York Times put it 
on the front page, Dan Rather announced it on the evening 
news, and George Will wrote a column about it in Newsweek. 
Every architecture critic had an opinion, and so did a lot of 
editorial writers. Not all of them liked the idea of the world’s 
tallest building. But the point is that we got a lot of attention, 
and that alone creates value. 

The other thing I do when I talk with reporters is to be 
straight. I try not to deceive them or to be defensive, because 
those are precisely the ways most people get themselves into 
trouble with the press. Instead, when a reporter asks me a 
tough question, I try to frame a positive answer, even if that 
means shifting the ground. For example, if someone asks me 
what negative effects the world’s tallest building might have 
on the West Side, I turn the tables and talk about how New 
Yorkers deserve the world’s tallest building, and what a boost 
it will give the city to have that honor again. When a reporter 



asks why I build only for the rich, I note that the rich aren’t 
the only ones who benefit from my buildings. I explain that I 
put thousands of people to work who might otherwise be 
collecting unemployment, and that I add to the city’s tax base 
every time I build a new project. I also point out that buildings 
like Trump Tower have helped spark New York’s 
renaissance. 

The final key to the way I promote is bravado. I play to 
people’s fantasies. People may not always think big 
themselves, but they can still get very excited by those who 
do. That’s why a little hyperbole never hurts. People want to 
believe that something is the biggest and the greatest and the 
most spectacular. 

I call it truthful hyperbole. It’s an innocent form of 
exaggeration—and a very effective form of promotion. 



Fight Back 


Much as it pays to emphasize the positive, there are times 
when the only choice is confrontation. In most cases I’m very 
easy to get along with. I’m very good to people who are good 
to me. But when people treat me badly or unfairly or try to 
take advantage of me, my general attitude, all my life, has 
been to fight back very hard. The risk is that you’ll make a 
bad situation worse, and I certainly don’t recommend this 
approach to everyone. But my experience is that if you’re 
fighting for something you believe in—even if it means 
alienating some people along the way—things usually work 
out for the best in the end. 

When the city unfairly denied me, on Trump Tower, the 
standard tax break every developer had been getting, I fought 
them in six different courts. It cost me a lot of money, I was 
considered highly likely to lose, and people told me it was a 
no-win situation politically. I would have considered it worth 
the effort regardless of the outcome. In this case, I won— 
which made it even better. 

When Holiday Inns, once my partners at the Trump Plaza 
Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, ran a casino that 
consistently performed among the bottom 50 percent of 
casinos in town, I fought them very hard and they finally sold 
out their share to me. Then I began to think about trying to 
take over the Holiday Inns company altogether. 

Even if I never went on the offensive, there are a lot of 



people gunning for me now. One of the problems when you 
become successful is that jealousy and envy inevitably follow. 
There are people—I categorize them as life’s losers—who get 
their sense of accomplishment and achievement from trying to 
stop others. As far as I’m concerned, if they had any real 
ability they wouldn’t be fighting me, they’d be doing 
something constructive themselves. 



Deliver the Goods 


You can’t con people, at least not for long. You can create 
excitement, you can do wonderful promotion and get all kinds 
of press, and you can throw in a little hyperbole. But if you 
don’t deliver the goods, people will eventually catch on. 

I think of Jimmy Carter. After he lost the election to Ronald 
Reagan, Carter came to see me in my office. He told me he 
was seeking contributions to the Jimmy Carter Library. I 
asked how much he had in mind. And he said, “Donald, I 
would be very appreciative if you contributed five million 
dollars.” 

I was dumbfounded. I didn’t even answer him. 

But that experience also taught me something. Until then, 
I’d never understood how Jimmy Carter became president. 
The answer is that as poorly qualified as he was for the job, 
Jimmy Carter had the nerve, the guts, the balls, to ask for 
something extraordinary. That ability above all helped him get 
elected president. But then, of course, the American people 
caught on pretty quickly that Carter couldn’t do the job, and 
he lost in a landslide when he ran for reelection. 

Ronald Reagan is another example. He is so smooth and so 
effective a performer that he completely won over the 
American people. Only now, nearly seven years later, are 
people beginning to question whether there’s anything 
beneath that smile. 



I see the same thing in my business, which is full of people 
who talk a good game but don’t deliver. When Trump Tower 
became successful, a lot of developers got the idea of imitating 
our atrium, and they ordered their architects to come up with a 
design. The drawings would come back, and they would start 
costing out the job. 

What they discovered is that the bronze escalators were 
going to cost a million dollars extra, and the waterfall was 
going to cost two million dollars, and the marble was going to 
cost many millions more. They saw that it all added up to 
many millions of dollars, and all of a sudden these people with 
these great ambitions would decide, well, let’s forget about the 
atrium. 

The dollar always talks in the end. I’m lucky, because I 
work in a very, very special niche, at the top of the market, 
and I can afford to spend top dollar to build the best. I 
promoted the hell out of Trump Tower, but I also had a great 
product to promote. 



Contain the Costs 


I believe in spending what you have to. But I also believe in 
not spending more than you should. When I was building 
low-income housing, the most important thing was to get it 
built quickly, inexpensively, and adequately, so you could 
rent it out and make a few bucks. That’s when I learned to be 
cost-conscious. I never threw money around. I learned from 
my father that every penny counts, because before too long 
your pennies turn into dollars. 

To this day, if I feel a contractor is overcharging me, I’ll 
pick up the phone, even if it’s only for $5,000 or $10,000, 
and I’ll complain. People say to me, “What are you bothering 
for, over a few bucks?” My answer is that the day I can’t pick 
up the telephone and make a twenty-five-cent call to save 
$10,000 is the day I’m going to close up shop. 

The point is that you can dream great dreams, but they’ll 
never amount to much if you can’t turn them into reality at a 
reasonable cost. At the time I built Trump Plaza in Atlantic 
City, banks were reluctant to finance new construction at all, 
because almost every casino up to then had experienced tens 
of millions of dollars in cost overruns. We brought Trump 
Plaza in on budget, and on time. As a result, we were able to 
open for Memorial Day weekend, the start of the high season. 
By contrast, Bob Guccione of Penthouse has been trying for 
the past seven years to build a casino on the Boardwalk site 
right next to ours. All he has to show for his efforts is a 



rusting half-built frame and tens of millions of dollars in lost 
revenues and squandered carrying costs. 

Even small jobs can get out of control if you’re not 
attentive. For nearly seven years I watched from the window 
of my office as the city tried to rebuild Wollman Rink in 
Central Park. At the end of that time, millions of dollars had 
been wasted and the job was farther from being completed 
than when the work began. They were all set to rip out the 
concrete and start over when I finally couldn’t stand it 
anymore, and I offered to do it myself. The job took four 
months to complete at a fraction of the city’s cost. 



Have Fun 


I don’t kid myself. Life is very fragile, and success doesn’t 
change that. If anything, success makes it more fragile. 
Anything can change, without warning, and that’s why I try 
not to take any of what’s happened too seriously. Money was 
never a big motivation for me, except as a way to keep score. 
The real excitement is playing the game. I don’t spend a lot of 
time worrying about what I should have done differently, or 
what’s going to happen next. If you ask me exactly what the 
deals I’m about to describe all add up to in the end, I’m not 
sure I have a very good answer. Except that I’ve had a very 
good time making them. 



3 

GROWING UP 


T he most important influence on me, growing up, was my 

father, Fred Trump. I learned a lot from him. I learned 
about toughness in a very tough business, I learned 
about motivating people, and I learned about competence and 
efficiency: get in, get it done, get it done right, and get out. 

At the same time, I learned very early on that I didn’t want 
to be in the business my father was in. He did very well 
building rent-controlled and rent-stabilized housing in Queens 
and Brooklyn, but it was a very tough way to make a buck. I 
wanted to try something grander, more glamorous, and more 
exciting. I also realized that if I ever wanted to be known as 
more than Fred Trump’s son, I was eventually going to have 
to go out and make my own mark. I’m fortunate that my 
father was content to stay with what he knew and did so well. 
That left me free to make my mark in Manhattan. Even so, I 
never forgot the lessons I learned at my father’s side. 

His story is classic Horatio Alger. Fred Trump was born in 




New Jersey in 1905. His father, who came here from Sweden 
as a child, owned a moderately successful restaurant, but he 
was also a hard liver and a hard drinker, and he died when my 
father was eleven years old. My father’s mother, Elizabeth, 
went to work as a seamstress to support her three children. 
The oldest, also named Elizabeth, was sixteen at the time, and 
the youngest, John, was nine. My father was the middle child 
but the first son, and he became the man of the house. Almost 
immediately, he began taking odd jobs—everything from 
deliveries for a local fruit store to shining shoes to hauling 
lumber on a construction site. Construction always interested 
him, and during high school he began taking night classes in 
carpentry, plan-reading, and estimating, figuring that if he 
learned a trade, he’d always be able to make a living. By the 
age of sixteen, he’d built his first structure, a two-car frame 
garage for a neighbor. Middle-class people were just 
beginning to buy cars, few homes had attached garages, and 
my father was soon able to establish a very good new business 
building prefabricated garages for fifty dollars apiece. 

He graduated from high school in 1922, and with a family 
to support, he couldn’t even consider college. Instead, he went 
to work as a carpenter’s helper for a home-builder in Queens. 
He was better with his hands than most, but he also had some 
other advantages. For starters, he was just a very smart guy. 
Even to this day, he can add five columns of numbers in his 
head and keep them all straight. Between his night courses and 
his basic common sense, he was able to show the other 



carpenters, most of whom had no education at all, shortcuts, 
such as how to frame a rafter with a steel square. 

In addition, my father was always very focused and very 
ambitious. Most of his co-workers were happy just to have a 
job. My father not only wanted to work, he also wanted to do 
well and to get ahead. Finally, my father just plain loved 
working. From as early as I can remember, my father would 
say to me, “The most important thing in life is to love what 
you’re doing, because that’s the only way you’ll ever be really 
good at it.” 

One year after he got out of high school, my father built his 
first home, a one-family house in Woodhaven, Queens. It cost 
a little less than $5,000 to build, and he sold it for $7,500. He 
called his company Elizabeth Trump & Son because at the 
time he wasn’t of age, and his mother had to sign all his legal 
documents and checks. As soon as he sold his first house, he 
used the profit to build another, and then another and another, 
in working-class Queens communities like Woodhaven, 
Hollis, and Queens Village. For working people who’d spent 
their lives in small, crowded apartments, my father offered a 
whole new life-style: modestly priced suburban-style brick 
houses. They were gobbled up as fast as he could build them. 

Instinctively, my father began to think bigger. By 1929, 
aiming at a more affluent market, he started building much 
larger homes. Instead of tiny brick houses, he put up three- 
story Colonials, Tudors, and Victorians in a section of Queens 



that ultimately became known as Jamaica Estates—and where, 
eventually, he built a home for our family. When the 
Depression hit and the housing market fell off, my father 
turned his attention to other businesses. He bought a bankrupt 
mortgage-servicing company and sold it at a profit a year 
later. Next, he built a self-service supermarket in Woodhaven, 
one of the first of its kind. All the local tradesmen—butcher, 
tailor, shoemaker—rented concessions in the space, and the 
convenience of having everything available under one roof 
made the operation an immediate success. Within a year, 
however, eager to return to building, my father sold out to 
King Kullen for a large profit. 

By 1934 the Depression was finally beginning to ease, but 
money was still tight and so my father decided to go back to 
building lower-priced homes. This time he chose the 
depressed Flatbush area of Brooklyn, where land was cheap 
and he sensed there was a lot of room for growth. Once again 
his instincts were right. In three weeks he sold 78 homes, and 
during the next dozen years, he built 2,500 more throughout 
Queens and Brooklyn. He was becoming very successful. 

In 1936 my father married my wonderful mother, Mary 
MacLeod, and they began a family. My father’s success also 
made it possible for him to give to his younger brother 
something he’d missed himself: a college education. With my 
father’s help, my uncle, John Trump, went to college, got his 
Ph.D. from M.I.T., and eventually became a full professor of 
physics and one of the country’s great scientists. Perhaps 



because my father never got a college degree himself, he 
continued to view people who had one with a respect that 
bordered on awe. In most cases they didn’t deserve it. My 
father could run circles around most academics and he would 
have done very well in college, if he’d been able to go. 

We had a very traditional family. My father was the power 
and the breadwinner, and my mother was the perfect 
housewife. That didn’t mean she sat around playing bridge 
and talking on the phone. There were five children in all, and 
besides taking care of us, she cooked and cleaned and darned 
socks and did charity work at the local hospital. We lived in a 
large house, but we never thought of ourselves as rich kids. 
We were brought up to know the value of a dollar and to 
appreciate the importance of hard work. Our family was 
always very close, and to this day they are my closest friends. 
My parents had no pretensions. My father still works out of a 
small, modest back office on Avenue Z in the Sheepshead Bay 
section of Brooklyn, in a building he put up in 1948. It’s 
simply never occurred to him to move. 

My sister Maryanne was the first born, and when she 
graduated from Mount Holyoke College, she followed my 
mother’s path at first, marrying and staying at home while her 
son grew up. But she also inherited a lot of my father’s drive 
and ambition, and when her son David became a teenager, she 
went back to school, to study law. She graduated with honors, 
began with a private firm, worked for five years as a federal 
prosecutor in the U.S. Attorney’s Office, and four years ago 



became a federal judge. Maryanne is really something. My 
younger sister, Elizabeth, is kind and bright but less 
ambitious, and she works at Chase Manhattan Bank in 
Manhattan. 

My older brother, Freddy, the first son, had perhaps the 
hardest time in our family. My father is a wonderful man, but 
he is also very much a business guy and strong and tough as 
hell. My brother was just the opposite. Handsome as could be, 
he loved parties and had a great, warm personality and a real 
zest for life. He didn’t have an enemy in the world. Naturally, 
my father very much wanted his oldest son in the business, 
but unfortunately, business just wasn’t for Freddy. He went to 
work with my father reluctantly, and he never had a feel for 
real estate. He wasn’t the kind of guy who could stand up to a 
killer contractor or negotiate with a rough supplier. Because 
my father was so strong, there were inevitably confrontations 
between the two of them. In most cases, Freddy came out on 
the short end. 

Eventually, it became clear to all of us that it wasn’t 
working, and Freddy went off to pursue what he loved most 
—flying airplanes. He moved to Florida, became a 
professional pilot, and flew for TWA. He also loved fishing 
and boating. Freddy was probably happiest during that period 
in his life, and yet I can remember saying to him, even though 
I was eight years younger, “Come on, Freddy, what are you 
doing? You’re wasting your time.” I regret now that I ever 
said that. 



Perhaps I was just too young to realize that it was irrelevant 
what my father or I thought about what Freddy was doing. 
What mattered was that he enjoyed it. Along the way, I think 
Freddy became discouraged, and he started to drink, and that 
led to a downward spiral. At the age of forty-three, he died. 
It’s very sad, because he was a wonderful guy who never 
quite found himself. In many ways he had it all, but the 
pressures of our particular family were not for him. I only 
wish I had realized this sooner. 

Fortunately for me, I was drawn to business very early, and 
I was never intimidated by my father, the way most people 
were. I stood up to him, and he respected that. We had a 
relationship that was almost businesslike. I sometimes wonder 
if we’d have gotten along so well if I hadn’t been as business- 
oriented as I am. 

Even in elementary school, I was a very assertive, 
aggressive kid. In the second grade I actually gave a teacher a 
black eye—I punched my music teacher because I didn’t think 
he knew anything about music and I almost got expelled. I’m 
not proud of that, but it’s clear evidence that even early on I 
had a tendency to stand up and make my opinions known in a 
very forceful way. The difference now is that I like to use my 
brain instead of my fists. 

I was always something of a leader in my neighborhood. 
Much the way it is today, people either liked me a lot, or they 
didn’t like me at all. In my own crowd I was very well liked, 



and I tended to be the kid that others followed. As an 
adolescent I was mostly interested in creating mischief, 
because for some reason I liked to stir things up, and I liked to 
test people. Pd throw water balloons, shoot spitballs, and 
make a ruckus in the schoolyard and at birthday parties. It 
wasn’t malicious so much as it was aggressive. My brother 
Robert likes to tell the story of the time when it became clear 
to him where I was headed. 

Robert is two years younger than I am, and we have always 
been very close, although he is much quieter and more 
easygoing than I am. One day we were in the playroom of our 
house, building with blocks. I wanted to build a very tall 
building, but it turned out that I didn’t have enough blocks. I 
asked Robert if I could borrow some of his, and he said, 
“Okay, but you have to give them back when you’re done.” I 
ended up using all of my blocks, and then all of his, and when 
I was done, I’d created a beautiful building. I liked it so much 
that I glued the whole thing together. And that was the end of 
Robert’s blocks. 

When I turned thirteen, my father decided to send me to a 
military school, assuming that a little military training might be 
good for me. I wasn’t thrilled about the idea, but it turned out 
he was right. Beginning in the eighth grade I went to the New 
York Military Academy in upstate New York. I stayed 
through my senior year, and along the way I learned a lot 
about discipline, and about channeling my aggression into 
achievement. In my senior year I was appointed a captain of 



the cadets. 

There was one teacher in particular who had a big impact on 
me. Theodore Dobias was a former drill sergeant in the 
marines, and physically he was very tough and very rough, 
the kind of guy who could slam into a goalpost wearing a 
football helmet and break the post rather than his head. He 
didn’t take any back talk from anyone, least of all from kids 
who came from privileged backgrounds. If you stepped out of 
line, Dobias smacked you and he smacked you hard. Very 
quickly I realized that I wasn’t going to make it with this guy 
by trying to take him on physically. A few less fortunate kids 
chose that route, and they ended up getting stomped. Most of 
my classmates took the opposite approach and became 
nebbishes. They never challenged Dobias about anything. 

I took a third route, which was to use my head to get 
around the guy. I figured out what it would take to get Dobias 
on my side. In a way, I finessed him. It helped that I was a 
good athlete, since he was the baseball coach and I was the 
captain of the team. But I also learned how to play him. 

What I did, basically, was to convey that I respected his 
authority, but that he didn’t intimidate me. It was a delicate 
balance. Like so many strong guys, Dobias had a tendency to 
go for the jugular if he smelled weakness. On the other hand, 
if he sensed strength but you didn’t try to undermine him, he 
treated you like a man. From the time I figured that out—and 
it was more an instinct than a conscious thought—we got 



along great. 

I was a good enough student at the academy, although I 
can’t say I ever worked very hard. I was lucky that it came 
relatively easily to me, because I was never all that interested 
in schoolwork. I understood early on that the whole academic 
thing was only a preliminary to the main event—which was 
going to be whatever I did after I graduated from college. 

Almost from the time I could walk, I’d been going to 
construction sites with my father. Robert and I would tag 
along and spend our time hunting for empty soda bottles, 
which we’d take to the store for deposit money. As a teenager, 
when I came home from school for vacation, I followed my 
father around to learn about the business close up—dealing 
with contractors or visiting buildings or negotiating for a new 
site. 

You made it in my father’s business—rent-controlled and 
rent-stabilized buildings—by being very tough and very 
relentless. To turn a profit, you had to keep your costs down, 
and my father was always very price-conscious. He’d 
negotiate just as hard with a supplier of mops and floor wax as 
he would with the general contractor for the larger items on a 
project. One advantage my father had was that he knew what 
everything cost. No one could put anything over on him. If 
you know, for example, that a plumbing job is going to cost 
the contractor $400,000, then you know how far you can 
push the guy. You’re not going to try to negotiate him down 



to $300,000, because that’s just going to put him out of 
business. But you’re also not going to let him talk you into 
$600,000. 

The other way my father got contractors to work for a good 
price was by selling them on his reliability. He’d offer a low 
price for a job, but then he’d say, “Look, with me you get 
paid, and you get paid on time, and with someone else, who 
knows if you ever see your money?” He’d also point out that 
with him they’d get in and out quickly and on to the next job. 
And finally, because he was always building, he could hold 
out the promise of plenty of future work. His arguments were 
usually compelling. 

My father was also an unbelievably demanding taskmaster. 
Every morning at six, he’d be there at the site and he would 
just pound and pound and pound. He was almost a one-man 
show. If a guy wasn’t doing his job the way my father 
thought it should be done—and I mean any job, because he 
could do them all—he’d jump in and take over. 

It was always amusing to watch a certain scenario repeat 
itself. My father would start a building in, say, Flatbush, at the 
same time that two competitors began putting up their own 
buildings nearby. Invariably, my father would finish his 
building three or four months before his competitors did. His 
building would also always be a little better-looking than the 
other two, with a nicer, more spacious lobby and larger rooms 
in the apartments themselves. He’d rent them out quickly, at a 



time when it wasn’t so easy to rent. Eventually, one or both of 
his competitors would go bankrupt before they’d finish their 
buildings, and my father would step in and buy them out. I 
saw this happen over and over. 

In 1949, when I was just three years old, my father began 
building Shore Haven Apartments, the first of several large 
apartment complexes that eventually made him one of the 
biggest landlords in New York’s outer boroughs. Because he 
built the projects so efficiently, my father did exceptionally 
well with them. At the time, the government was still in the 
business of financing lower- and middle-income housing. To 
build Shore Haven, for example, my father got a loan of 
$10.3 million from the Federal Housing Administration 
(FHA). The loan was based on what the agency projected as a 
fair and reasonable cost for the project, including a builder’s 
profit of 7.5 percent. 

By pushing his contractors very hard, and negotiating hard 
with his suppliers, my father was able to bring the project in 
ahead of schedule and almost $1 million under budget. The 
term “windfall profits” was actually coined to describe what 
my father and some others managed to earn through hard 
work and competence. Eventually such profits were 
disallowed. 

In the meantime, however, my father put up thousands of 
good quality lower- and middle-income apartments of the sort 
that no one is building today because it’s not profitable and 



government subsidies have been eliminated. To this day, the 
Trump buildings in Queens and Brooklyn are considered 
among the best reasonably priced places to live in New York. 

After I graduated from New York Military Academy in 
1964 I flirted briefly with the idea of attending film school at 
the University of Southern California. I was attracted to the 
glamour of the movies, and I admired guys like Sam 
Goldwyn, Darryl Zanuck, and most of all Louis B. Mayer, 
whom I considered great showmen. But in the end I decided 
real estate was a much better business. 

I began by attending Fordham University in the Bronx, 
mostly because I wanted to be close to home. I got along very 
well with the Jesuits who ran the school, but after two years, I 
decided that as long as I had to be in college, I might as well 
test myself against the best. I applied to the Wharton School of 
Finance at the University of Pennsylvania and I got in. At the 
time, if you were going to make a career in business, Wharton 
was the place to go. Harvard Business School may produce a 
lot of CEOs—guys who manage public companies—but the 
real entrepreneurs all seemed to go to Wharton: Saul 
Steinberg, Leonard Lauder, Ron Perelman—the list goes on 
and on. 

Perhaps the most important thing I learned at Wharton was 
not to be overly impressed by academic credentials. It didn’t 
take me long to realize that there was nothing particularly 
awesome or exceptional about my classmates, and that I could 



compete with them just fine. The other important thing I got 
from Wharton was a Wharton degree. In my opinion, that 
degree doesn’t prove very much, but a lot of people I do 
business with take it very seriously, and it’s considered very 
prestigious. So all things considered, I’m glad I went to 
Wharton. 

I was also very glad to get finished. I immediately moved 
back home and went to work full-time with my father. I 
continued to learn a lot, but it was during this period that I 
began to think about alternatives. 

For starters, my father’s scene was a little rough for my 
tastes—and by that I mean physically rough. I remember, for 
example, going around with the men we called rent collectors. 
To do this job you had to be physically imposing, because 
when it came to collecting rent from people who didn’t want 
to pay, size mattered a lot more than brains. 

One of the first tricks I learned was that you never stand in 
front of someone’s door when you knock. Instead you stand 
by the wall and reach over to knock. The first time a collector 
explained that to me, I couldn’t imagine what he was talking 
about. “What’s the point?” I said. He looked at me like I was 
crazy. “The point,” he said, “is that if you stand to the side, the 
only thing exposed to danger is your hand.” I still wasn’t sure 
what he meant. “In this business,” he said, “if you knock on 
the wrong apartment at the wrong time, you’re liable to get 
shot.” 



My father had never sheltered me, but even so, this was not 
a world I found very attractive. Pd just graduated from 
Wharton, and suddenly here I was in a scene that was violent 
at worst and unpleasant at best. For example, there were 
tenants who’d throw their garbage out the window, because it 
was easier than putting it in the incinerator. At one point, I 
instituted a program to teach people about using the 
incinerators. The vast majority of tenants were just fine, but 
the bad element required attention, and to me it just wasn’t 
worth it. 

The second thing I didn’t find appealing was that the profit 
margins were so low. You had no choice but to pinch pennies, 
and there was no room for any luxuries. Design was beside 
the point because every building had to be pretty much the 
same: four walls, common brick fagades, and straight up. You 
used red brick, not necessarily because you liked it but 
because it was a penny a brick cheaper than tan brick. 

I still remember a time when my father visited the Trump 
Tower site, midway through construction. Our faqade was a 
glass curtain wall, which is far more expensive than brick. In 
addition, we were using the most expensive glass you can buy 
—bronze solar. My father took one look, and he said to me, 
“Why don’t you forget about the damn glass? Give them four 
or five stories of it and then use common brick for the rest. 
Nobody is going to look up anyway.” It was a classic, Fred 
Trump standing there on 57th Street and Fifth Avenue trying 
to save a few bucks. I was touched, and of course I 



understood where he was coming from—but also exactly why 
I’d decided to leave. 

The real reason I wanted out of my father’s business—more 
important than the fact that it was physically rough and 
financially tough—was that I had loftier dreams and visions. 
And there was no way to implement them building housing in 
the outer boroughs. 

Looking back, I realize now that I got some of my sense of 
showmanship from my mother. She always had a flair for the 
dramatic and the grand. She was a very traditional housewife, 
but she also had a sense of the world beyond her. I still 
remember my mother, who is Scottish by birth, sitting in front 
of the television set to watch Queen Elizabeth’s coronation 
and not budging for an entire day. She was just enthralled by 
the pomp and circumstance, the whole idea of royalty and 
glamour. I also remember my father that day, pacing around 
impatiently. “For Christ’s sake, Mary,” he’d say. “Enough is 
enough, turn it off. They’re all a bunch of con artists.” My 
mother didn’t even look up. They were total opposites in that 
sense. My mother loves splendor and magnificence, while my 
father, who is very down-to-earth, gets excited only by 
competence and efficiency. 



4 

THE CINCINNATI KID 


Prudence Pays 


I N COLLEGE while my friends were reading the comics and the 
sports pages of newspapers, I was reading the listings of 
FHA foreclosures. It might seem a bit abnormal to study 
lists of federally financed housing projects in foreclosure, but 
that’s what I did. And that’s how I found out about Swifton 
Village. It was a job that I bought with my father, while I was 
in college, and it was my first big deal. 

Swifton Village was a 1,200-unit apartment development in 
Cincinnati, Ohio, and it was a very troubled place. There were 
800 vacant apartments, the developers had gone under, the 
government had foreclosed and the whole deal was a disaster. 
But from our perspective that was great, because it gave us a 
terrific opportunity. 

A lot of times, when you are dealing with a government 
agency on a foreclosure, they just want to get out of it as 
quickly as possible. They aren’t equipped to manage it. In this 
case, things had deteriorated so badly that no one else was 
even bidding. 




Today youTl find the same thing if you go out to the Sun 
Belt, where they built all that housing during the oil boom. 
Now you have huge developments with 30 and 40 percent 
vacancy rates. Developers are suicidal because banks are 
foreclosing on them. It’s a great time for a smart buyer, 
because you can get unbelievable deals. 

My father and I put in a very minimal bid for Swifton, and 
it was accepted. We ended up paying less than $6 million for a 
job which had cost twice that much to build just two years 
earlier. We were also immediately able to get a mortgage for 
what we paid, plus about $100,000, which we put toward 
fixing the place up. In other words, we got the project without 
putting down any money of our own. All we had to do was 
go and run it. And if we did even a halfway decent job, we 
could easily cover our mortgage from the proceeds of the rent. 

The fact that it was such a big job appealed to my father and 
to me because it meant we could focus a lot of energy on it 
without feeling we were wasting our time. It takes almost the 
same amount of energy to manage 50 units as it does 1,200— 
except that with 1,200 you have a much bigger upside. 

After we negotiated the deal, success became a matter of 
management and marketing. The challenge was to get the 
place rented, and rented to good tenants who would stay there. 
The tenants who were living in the project when I took over 
had ripped the place apart. Many of them had come down 
from the hills of Kentucky. They were very poor and had 



seven or eight children, almost no possessions, and no 
experience living in an apartment complex. They crammed 
into one-room and two-room apartments, and their children 
went wild. They would just destroy the apartments and wreak 
havoc on the property. 

The tenants not only didn’t care, many of them also didn’t 
see fit to pay rent. If you pressed them, they had a tendency to 
take off. What we discovered is that to avoid paying rent, 
these people would rent a trailer, pull it up in front of their 
apartments at one or two in the morning, and disappear into 
the night with all their belongings. That was fine by me, but I 
wanted to make sure we got paid first. Our solution was to 
institute a “trailer-watch.” We had someone on round-the- 
clock patrol. 

After we got rid of the bad tenants, we set about fixing the 
place up to attract a better element. That required a substantial 
investment, almost $800,000 by the time we were done, which 
was a lot of money in those days. But it was more than worth 
it. In New York the laws prevent you from getting fair 
increases even when you make improvements, but in 
Cincinnati we were immediately able to charge and get much 
higher rents for the apartments at Swifton Village. 

The first thing we did was invest in beautiful white shutters 
for the windows. That may not sound like a big deal, but what 
the shutters did was give a bunch of cold red brick buildings a 
feeling of warmth and coziness, which was important. It was 



also much more expensive than you’d guess, because you’re 
talking about 1,200 units, each of which has eight to ten 
windows. The next thing we did was rip out the cheap, 
horrible aluminum front doors on the apartments and put up 
beautiful colonial white doors. 

I made sure the whole complex was very clean and very 
well maintained. As I said earlier, I’ve always had a personal 
thing about cleanliness, but I also believe it’s a very good 
investment. For example, if you want to sell a car and you 
spend five dollars to wash and polish it and then apply a little 
extra elbow grease, suddenly you find you can charge an extra 
four hundred dollars—and get it. I can always tell a loser 
when I see someone with a car for sale that is filthy dirty. It’s 
so easy to make it look better. 

It’s no different in real estate. Well-maintained real estate is 
always going to be worth a lot more than poorly maintained 
real estate. That’s been less true during the past few years in 
New York, when there’s been such a fever for real estate that 
people buy anything. But it’s a mistake to be lulled by good 
times. Markets always change, and as soon as there’s a 
downturn, cleanliness becomes a major value. 

We painted the hallways, we sanded and stained the floors, 
we kept the vacant apartments immaculately clean, and we 
landscaped the grounds. We also ran beautiful newspaper ads 
for the project—at a time when not many people in Cincinnati 
were advertising real estate. People came to check us out, and 



the word of mouth started getting good. Within a year, the 
buildings were 100 percent rented. 

Along the way we went through a half dozen different 
project managers before we found the one we wanted. We had 
managers who were honest but dumb, including one guy who 
literally painted himself into the corner of an apartment. 
Others were smart but didn’t know the first thing about 
managing. Fortunately, we went through them fast, because I 
tend to size people up pretty quickly. 

Ultimately, we got a fabulous man whom I’ll call Irving. 
Irving was sixty-five years old and a real character. He was 
one of the greatest bullshit artists I’ve ever met, but in addition 
to being a very sharp talker and a very slick salesman, he was 
also an amazing manager. Irving was the kind of guy who 
worked perhaps an hour a day and accomplished more in that 
hour than most managers did in twelve hours. I learned 
something from that: it’s not how many hours you put in, it’s 
what you get done while you’re working. 

The problem with Irving was that he wasn’t the most 
trustworthy guy in the world. I suspected as much from the 
first day, but it wasn’t until I tried to put a bond on him— 
something I do with any employee who handles money—that 
my instincts were confirmed. My insurance agent called me 
back after running a check, and he said, “Donald, you’ve got 
to be kidding about a bond. This guy is a con man.” It turned 
out that Irving had done all sorts of con jobs and swindles, 



and he’d often been in trouble with the law. 

My philosophy has always been that if you ever catch 
someone stealing, you have to go after him very hard, even if 
it costs you ten times more than he stole. Stealing is the worst. 
But with Irving I had a dilemma: he was far and away more 
capable than any honest manager I had found, and so long as 
he was in charge, no one under him would dare steal. That 
meant I only had to keep my eye on him. I used to kid Irving. 
I’d say, “We pay you $50,000 and all you can steal.” And he 
would act all upset. 

If I’d caught him in the act, I would have fired Irving on the 
spot, but I never did. Still, I figure he managed to steal at least 
another $50,000 a year. Even so, I was probably getting a 
bargain. 

One day I walked into the office, and one of the girls who 
worked there was crying. It turned out that there was 
something they called a funeral fund, to which they all 
contributed in order to buy flowers for anyone they knew 
who’d died. They had about $80 in the fund. When I asked 
the girl what she was crying about, she said, “Oh, that Irving, 
he stole our funeral fund.” 

I went to Irving and I said, “Irving, dammit, did you steal 
their money?” Of course he just denied it. He swore he’d get 
those girls, and he ranted and raved for half an hour. But I 
always assumed the girls were telling the truth. Irving was a 
classic. He had problems, but he was a classic. 



I’ll give you an example of how Irving worked. You’ve got 
to understand that we are talking about a short, fat, bald- 
headed guy with thick glasses and hands like Jell-O, who’d 
never lifted anything in his life beside a pen, and who had no 
physical ability whatsoever. What he did have, however, was 
an incredible mouth. 

As I mentioned, in the early days we had a good number of 
tenants who didn’t believe in paying rent. Sometimes, Irving 
would go out and collect himself. He’d ring the doorbell, and 
when someone came to the door, he’d go crazy. He’d get red 
in the face, use every filthy word he could think of, and make 
every threat in the book. It was an act, but it was very 
effective: usually they paid up right then and there. 

One day, while Irving was on his rounds, he knocked on a 
door, and a little ten-year-old girl answered. Irving said, “You 

go tell your father to pay his f-ing rent or I’m going to 

knock his ass off.” And he went on like that, until the girl’s 
mother came out to see what was going on. As it happened, 
she was an absolutely beautiful woman. 

Now Irving had a weakness for all women, and this woman 
was quite exceptional. So immediately, Irving started putting 
the move on her. He invited her out to dinner. The woman, 
whose husband was either a truck driver or a construction 
worker, had never experienced anyone like Irving and 
obviously didn’t know what to make of him. There was no 
way, however, that she was interested in Irving, and finally he 



gave up and we left. 

About an hour later, Irving and I were sitting in his office 
when this huge guy, a monster, maybe 240 pounds, burst 
through the door. He was furious that Irving had cursed in 
front of his daughter, and he was ready to strangle him for 
coming on to his wife. The guy had murder in his eyes. 

I expected Irving, if he had any sense, to run for his life. 
Instead, he started verbally attacking the man, flailing and 
screaming and chopping his hands in the air. “You get out of 
this office,” he said. ‘Til kill you. I’ll destroy you. These 
hands are lethal weapons, they’re registered with the police 
department.” 

I’ll never forget how the guy looked at Irving and said, 
“You come outside, you fat crap, I want to burn grass with 
you.” I always loved that phrase: “burn grass.” And I thought 
to myself, Irving is in serious trouble. But Irving didn’t seem 
to think so. “I’d fight you any time you want,” he said, “but 
it’s unlawful for me to fight.” 

All you had to do was look at Irving to know those hands 
were hardly registered weapons. But Irving was very much 
like a lion tamer. You’ve seen these guys, maybe 150 pounds, 
who walk blithely into a cage where there’s a magnificent 
800-pound lion pacing around. If that animal sensed any 
weakness or any fear, he’d destroy the trainer in a second. But 
instead the trainer cracks his whip, walks with authority, and, 
amazingly, the lion listens. Which is exactly what Irving did 



with this huge guy, except his whip was his mouth. 

The result was that the guy left the office. He was still in a 
rage, but he left. Irving probably saved his own life, just by 
showing no fear, and that left a very vivid impression on me. 
You can’t be scared. You do your thing, you hold your 
ground, you stand up tall, and whatever happens, happens. 

As for Swifton Village, once Irving had it running well, I 
began spending less and less time there. I wasn’t really needed 
anymore in Cincinnati. So I cut back my visits to Swifton, first 
to once a week, and eventually to once a month. 

Early on, I’d become particularly friendly with one of the 
newer tenants at Swifton. He was Jewish, an older man who’d 
been in a concentration camp in Poland. He’d started off in 
America as a butcher, then bought the shop, and by the time I 
met him, he owned perhaps fourteen butcher shops. He and 
his wife had taken two apartments in Swifton and put them 
together, and they had a great place, and they were very happy 
there. I had a lot of respect for this guy, because he had street 
smarts, he’d been around, and he was obviously a true 
survivor. 

One day, a number of years after we first bought the place, 
I was out visiting. I ran into my friend. “How are you doing, 
how are you feeling?” I asked. “Good, good,” he replied, but 
then he took me aside and whispered, “Donald, you are a 
friend of mine and I have to tell you, sell this job.” And I said, 
“Why?” 



“Because it’s going real bad—not the job but the area. It’s 
being surrounded by people who are so bad they will cut your 
throat and walk away and not even think about it. I’m talking 
about people who enjoy cutting throats.” That was the exact 
expression. I never forgot it. 

Now, I’m someone who responds to people I have respect 
for, and I listen. Again, it’s instincts, not marketing studies. So 
I spent an extra two days in Cincinnati, and I rode around, and 
I saw that there was trouble brewing, that neighborhoods were 
getting rough. 

I put the job up for sale, and almost immediately we got an 
offer. We’d already done very well with Swifton Village, 
because our debt was very small relative to the size of the 
complex, and our rent roll, by the end, had reached about 
$700,000 a year. But selling was how we made a real killing. 

The buyer was the Prudent Real Estate Investment Trust. 
Those were the go-go days when real estate investment trusts 
—partnerships that invested in real estate—were very hot. The 
banks were loaning money to any REIT. The only problem 
was that many of the people running the REITs were neither 
knowledgeable nor competent. I called them the guys with the 
white bucks. They were the sort of people who’d throw 
money into a project in Puerto Rico without even going to see 
it. Eventually they’d discover that the building they thought 
they’d bought had never even been built. 

In the case of Prudent, they sent a young man out to inspect 



and evaluate the property prior to making a final decision on 
whether to go forward with the sale. This kid was about my 
age, but he looked like a teenager. Frankly, I was surprised 
they’d entrusted such a big decision to him. 

It turned out that what he wanted to do more than anything 
was go out for lunch. He’d heard about this restaurant in 
downtown Cincinnati called the Maisonette, which was 
supposed to be one of the five best restaurants in the country. 
He really wanted to eat there, and when he called to say he 
was coming, he asked me to make a lunch reservation. I said 
fine. 

His flight came in a little late, about midday, and I met him, 
and I took him over to Swifton Village and showed him the 
job. We still had 100 percent occupancy at the time, and he 
wasn’t interested in asking a lot of questions beyond that. He 
was anxious to get to the Maisonette. It took about half an 
hour to get there from Swifton, and we ended up spending 
about three hours over lunch, which is the opposite of the way 
I normally work. If I’d had only one day to look over a big 
job like Swifton, I’d sure as hell skip lunch and spend my 
time learning everything I could about what I was thinking of 
buying. 

By the time we were done with lunch, it was almost four 
o’clock, and I had to take him to his plane. He returned to 
New York well fed and feeling great, and he strongly 
recommended going ahead with the purchase. He told his 



bosses that the area was wonderful and that Swifton was a 
great deal. They approved the sale. The price was $12 million 
—or approximately a $6 million profit for us. It was a huge 
return on a short-term investment. 

What happened next is that we signed a contract. By then, I 
could see the dark clouds clearly on the horizon. A lot of 
tenants had their leases coming up and weren’t planning to 
renew. We put a clause in the contract of sale saying that all 
representations contained in it were as of the signing of the 
contract—not as of the closing, which is what’s typically 
required. In other words, we were willing to represent that the 
project was 100 percent rented at the time of the contract 
signing, but we didn’t want to make the same promise at the 
time of closing, three or four months down the line. 

The other thing I did was to insist on a clause in the contract 
in which they guaranteed they’d close, or else pay a huge 
penalty. That was also very unusual, because in nearly every 
other deal, the buyer puts up a 10 percent deposit, and if he 
fails to close, all he forfeits is the deposit. 

Frankly, the Prudent people should have been more 
prudent. But, as I said, the REITs were hot to trot, and they 
couldn’t make deals fast enough. In the end, of course, it 
never pays to be in too much of a hurry. On the day we 
closed, there were dozens of vacant apartments. 



5 

THE MOVE TO MANHATTAN 


1 HAD MY EYE on Manhattan from the time I graduated from 
Wharton in 1968. But at that point, the market in the city 
was very hot, the prices seemed very high, and I was 
unable to find a deal I liked—meaning a good piece of 
property at a price I found affordable. My father had done 
very well for himself, but he didn’t believe in giving his 
children huge trust funds. When I graduated from college, I 
had a net worth of perhaps $200,000, and most of it was tied 
up in buildings in Brooklyn and Queens. So I waited. I went 
to work helping to run my father’s business, and I continued 
to spend as much time as possible in Manhattan. 

The turning point came in 1971, when I decided to rent a 
Manhattan apartment. It was a studio, in a building on Third 
Avenue and 75th Street, and it looked out on the water tank in 
the court of the adjacent building. I jokingly referred to my 
apartment as a penthouse, because it did happen to be near the 
top floor of the building. I also tried to divide it up so that it 
would seem bigger. But no matter what I did, it was still a 




dark, dingy little apartment. Even so, I loved it. Moving into 
that apartment was probably more exciting for me than 
moving, fifteen years later, into the top three floors of Trump 
Tower on Fifth Avenue and 57th Street overlooking Central 
Park. 

You have to understand; I was a kid from Queens who 
worked in Brooklyn, and suddenly I had an apartment on the 
Upper East Side. 

The really important thing was that by virtue of this move I 
became much more familiar with Manhattan. I began to walk 
the streets in a way you never do if you just come in to visit or 
do business. I got to know all the good properties. I became a 
city guy instead of a kid from the boroughs. As far as I was 
concerned, I had the best of all worlds. I was young, and I had 
a lot of energy, and I was living in Manhattan, even though I 
commuted back to Brooklyn to work. 

One of the first things I did was join Le Club, which at the 
time was the hottest club in the city and perhaps the most 
exclusive—like Studio 54 at its height. It was located on East 
54th Street, and its membership included some of the most 
successful men and the most beautiful women in the world. It 
was the sort of place where you were likely to see a wealthy 
seventy-five-year-old guy walk in with three blondes from 
Sweden. 

I’ll never forget how I became a member. One day I called 
up Le Club and I said, “My name is Donald Trump and I’d 



like to join your club.” The guy on the other end of the phone 
just laughed and said, “You’ve got to be kidding.” Nobody, 
of course, had heard of me. The next day I got another idea, 
and I called back and I said to the guy, “Listen, could I have a 
list of your members? I may know someone who is a 
member.” And he said, “I’m sorry, we don’t do that,” and he 
hung up. 

The next day I called again and said, “I need to reach the 
president of the club. I want to send him something.” For 
some reason, the guy gave me the president’s name and his 
business number, and I called him up. I introduced myself. I 
said, very politely, “My name is Donald Trump, and I’d like 
to join Le Club.” And he said, “Do you have any friends or 
family in the club?” and I said, “No, I don’t know anybody 
there.” 

He said, “Well, what makes you think you should be 
admitted as a member?” I just kept talking and talking, and 
finally this fellow said to me, “I’ll tell you what, you sound 
like a nice young man, and maybe it would be good to have 
some younger members, so why don’t you meet me for a 
drink at Twenty-one?” 

The next night we met for a drink. There was just one small 
problem. I don’t drink, and I’m not very big on sitting 
around. My host, on the other hand, liked to drink, and he had 
brought along a friend who also liked to drink. For the next 
two hours, we sat there as they drank and I didn’t, until finally 



I said, “Listen, fellas, can I help you get home?” and they said, 
“No, let’s just have one more.” 

Now, I just wasn’t used to that. I have a father who has 
always been a rock, very straight and very solid. My father 
would come home every night at seven, have his dinner, read 
the newspaper, watch the news, and that was that. And I’m as 
much of a rock as my father. This was a totally different 
world. I remember wondering if every successful person in 
Manhattan was a big drinker. I figured it that was the case, I 
was going to have a big advantage. 

Finally, about ten, these guys had enough, and I practically 
had to carry them home. Two weeks passed, and I never heard 
from the president. Finally, I called him, and he didn’t even 
remember who I was. So now I had to go through the whole 
thing all over again, back to 21, only this time he didn’t drink 
as much, and he agreed to put me up for membership. He had 
only one misgiving. He said that because I was young and 
good-looking, and because some of the older members of the 
club were married to beautiful young women, he was worried 
that I might be tempted to try to steal their wives. He asked me 
to promise that I wouldn’t do that. 

I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. My mother is as 
much of a rock as my father. She is totally devoted to my 
father—they recently celebrated fifty years of marriage. That’s 
what I grew up with, and here’s this guy talking about stealing 


wives. 



Anyway, I promised. I was admitted to the club, and it 
turned out to be a great move for me, socially and 
professionally. I met a lot of beautiful young single women, 
and I went out almost every night. Actually, I never got 
involved with any of them very seriously. These were 
beautiful women, but many of them couldn’t carry on a 
normal conversation. Some were vain, some were crazy, some 
were wild, and many of them were phonies. For example, I 
quickly found out that I couldn’t take these girls back to my 
apartment, because by their standards what I had was a 
disaster, and in their world appearances were everything. 
When I finally did get married, I married a very beautiful 
woman, but a woman who also happens to be a rock, just like 
my mother and father. 

During that same period, I also met a lot of very successful, 
very wealthy men at Le Club. I had a good time when I went 
out at night, but I was also working. I was learning how the 
New York scene operates and I was meeting the sort of people 
with whom I’d eventually work on deals. I also met the sort of 
wealthy people, particularly Europeans and South Americans, 
who eventually bought the most expensive apartments in 
Trump Tower and Trump Plaza. 

It was at Le Club that I first met Roy Cohn. I knew him by 
reputation and was aware of his image as a guy who wasn’t 
afraid to fight. One night I found myself sitting at the table 
next to him. We got introduced, and we talked for a while, 
and I challenged him. I like to test people. I said to him, “I 



don’t like lawyers. I think all they do is delay deals, instead of 
making deals, and every answer they give you is no, and they 
are always looking to settle instead of fight.” He said he 
agreed with me. I liked that and so then I said, “Pm just not 
built that way. I’d rather fight than fold, because as soon as 
you fold once, you get the reputation of being a folder.” 

I could see Roy was intrigued, but he wasn’t sure what the 
point of it all was. Finally he said, “Is this just an academic 
conversation?” 

I said, “No, it’s not academic at all. It so happens that the 
government has just filed suit against our company and many 
others, under the civil rights act, saying that we discriminated 
against blacks in some of our housing developments.” I 
explained to him that I’d spent that afternoon with my father, 
talking to lawyers in a very prestigious Wall Street firm, and 
that they’d advised us to settle. That’s exactly what most 
businessmen do when the government charges them with 
anything, because they just don’t want bad publicity, even if 
they believe they can beat a phony rap. 

The idea of settling drove me crazy. The fact was that we 
did rent to blacks in our buildings. 

We wanted tenants who we could be sure would pay the 
rent, who would be neat and clean and good neighbors, and 
who met our requirement of having an income at least four 
times the rent. So I said to Roy, “What do you think I should 
do?” 



And he said, “My view is tell them to go to hell and fight 
the thing in court and let them prove that you discriminated, 
which seems to me very difficult to do, in view of the fact that 
you have black tenants in the building.” He also told me, “I 
don’t think you have any obligation to rent to tenants who 
would be undesirable, white or black, and the government 
doesn’t have a right to run your business.” 

That’s when I decided Roy Cohn was the right person to 
handle the case. I was nobody at the time, but he loved a good 
fight, and he took on my case. He went to court, and I went 
with him, and we fought the charges. In the end the 
government couldn’t prove its case, and we ended up making 
a minor settlement without admitting any guilt. Instead, we 
agreed to do some equal-opportunity advertising of vacancies 
for a period of time in the local newspaper. And that was the 
end of the suit. 

I learned a lot about Roy during that period. He was a great 
lawyer, when he wanted to be. He could go into a case 
without any notes. He had a photographic memory and could 
argue the facts from his head. When he was prepared, he was 
brilliant and almost unbeatable. However, he wasn’t always 
prepared. Even then, he was so brilliant that he could 
sometimes get away with it. Unfortunately, he could also be a 
disaster, and so I would always question Roy very closely 
before a court date. If he wasn’t prepared, I’d push for a 
postponement. 



I don’t kid myself about Roy. He was no Boy Scout. He 
once told me that he’d spent more than two thirds of his adult 
life under indictment on one charge or another. That amazed 
me. I said to him, “Roy, just tell me one thing. Did you really 
do all that stuff?” He looked at me and smiled. “What the hell 
do you think?” he said. I never really knew. 

Whatever else you could say about Roy, he was very tough. 
Sometimes I think that next to loyalty, toughness was the most 
important thing in the world to him. For example, all Roy’s 
friends knew he was gay, and if you saw him socially, he was 
invariably with some very good-looking young man. But Roy 
never talked about it. He just didn’t like the image. He felt that 
to the average person, being gay was almost synonymous with 
being a wimp. That was the last thing he wanted to project, so 
he almost went overboard to avoid it. If the subject of gay 
rights came up, Roy was always the first one to speak out 
against them. 

Tough as he was, Roy always had a lot of friends, and I’m 
not embarrassed to say I was one. He was a truly loyal guy—it 
was a matter of honor with him—and because he was also 
very smart, he was a great guy to have on your side. You 
could count on him to go to bat for you, even if he privately 
disagreed with your view, and even if defending you wasn’t 
necessarily the best thing for him. He was never two-faced. 

Just compare that with all the hundreds of “respectable” 
guys who make careers out of boasting about their 



uncompromising integrity but have absolutely no loyalty. 
They think only about what’s best for them and don’t think 
twice about stabbing a friend in the back if the friend becomes 
a problem. What I liked most about Roy Cohn was that he 
would do just the opposite. Roy was the sort of guy who’d be 
there at your hospital bed, long after everyone else had bailed 
out, literally standing by you to the death. 

In any case, I got to know a lot of people when I moved to 
Manhattan, and I got to know properties, but I still couldn’t 
find anything to buy at a price I liked. Then, suddenly, in 
1973 things began to turn bad in Manhattan. I’d always 
assumed the market would cool off, because everything runs 
in cycles and real estate is no different. Even so, I never 
expected things to get as bad as they did. It was a combination 
of factors. First, the federal government announced a 
moratorium on housing subsidies, which they had been giving 
out by the bushel, particularly in the city. At the same time, 
interest rates began to rise, after being so stable for so many 
years that it was easy to forget they could move at all. Then, to 
make things worse, there was a spurt of inflation, particularly 
in construction costs, which seem to rise even when there’s no 
inflation anywhere else. 

But the biggest problem by far was with the city itself. The 
city’s debt was rising to levels that started to make everyone 
very nervous. For the first time you heard people talk about 
the city going bankrupt. Fear led to more fear. Before long 
New York was suffering from a crisis of confidence. People 



simply stopped believing in the city. 

It wasn’t an environment conducive to new real estate 
development. In the first nine months of 1973, the city issued 
permits for about 15,000 new apartments and single-family 
homes in the five boroughs. In the first nine months of 1974, 
the number dropped to 6,000. 

I worried about the future of New York City too, but I can’t 
say it kept me up nights, I’m basically an optimist, and 
frankly, I saw the city’s trouble as a great opportunity for me. 
Because I grew up in Queens, I believed, perhaps to an 
irrational degree, that Manhattan was always going to be the 
best place to live—the center of the world. Whatever troubles 
the city might be having in the short term, there was no doubt 
in my mind that things had to turn around ultimately. What 
other city was going to take New York’s place? 

One of the pieces of property that had always fascinated me 
was the huge abandoned railyard along the Hudson River 
beginning at 59th Street and extending all the way up to 72nd 
Street. Every time I drove along the West Side Highway, I 
found myself dreaming about what could be built there. It 
didn’t take a genius to realize that one hundred acres of 
undeveloped riverfront property in Manhattan had a lot of 
potential. But it was another story to consider trying to 
develop such a huge piece of property when the city was in 
the midst of a financial crisis. 

I don’t believe that you can ever be hurt by buying a good 



location at a low price. At the time, a lot of neighborhoods on 
the West Side were considered dangerous places to live. There 
were welfare hotels on every side street, and drug dealers in 
every park. I remember the New York Times running a long 
series of articles about the block between Central Park West 
and Columbus Avenue at 84th Street—what a tough area it 
was. 

Even so, you didn’t have to look very far to see how easily 
it could all change. Even on the tough side streets, like West 
84th, there were magnificent old brownstones only a few steps 
away from Central Park. And on the avenues, especially 
Central Park West and Riverside Drive, there were beautiful 
old buildings with huge apartments and spectacular views. It 
was only a matter of time before people discovered the value. 

One day, in the summer of 1973, I came across a 
newspaper story about the Penn Central Railroad, which was 
in the middle of a massive bankruptcy filing. This particular 
story said that the Penn Central trustees had hired a company 
headed by a man named Victor Palmieri to sell off the assets 
of the railroad. Among the assets, it turned out, were those 
abandoned yards in the West Sixties, as well as more yards in 
the West Thirties. The deal Victor made with the Penn Central 
was that each time his company managed to find a buyer for 
an asset, he got a percentage of the sale. 

I had never heard of Victor Palmieri, but I realized 
immediately that he was someone I wanted to know. I called 



his representatives and said, “Hello, my name is Donald 
Trump, and I’d like to buy the Sixtieth Street yards.” The 
simplest approach is often the most effective. 

I think they liked my directness and my enthusiasm. I 
hadn’t built anything yet, but what I did have was the 
willingness to go after things that people in a better position 
than mine wouldn’t have considered seeking. 

I went to meet Victor, and we got on very well right from 
the start. He was a very smooth, attractive guy, an Italian who 
looked like a WASP. I told him how bad the 60th Street yards 
were, that the neighborhood was in trouble and the city was in 
trouble, and that I was probably crazy to be interested in the 
property at all. If you want to buy something, it’s obviously in 
your best interest to convince the seller that what he’s got isn’t 
worth very much. 

The second thing I told Victor was how incredibly hard it 
was going to be politically to get zoning approvals for such a 
big piece of undeveloped land. I pointed out that the 
community board would fight any development, and that the 
process of going before the City Planning Commission and 
the Board of Estimate would be endless. 

The third thing I did, and probably the most important, was 
to sell myself to Victor and his people. I couldn’t sell him on 
my experience or my accomplishment, so instead I sold him 
on my energy and my enthusiasm. 

Victor banks on people and he decided to take a shot on me. 



He ended up suggesting that I develop not only the 60th Street 
yards but also the yards on West 34th Street. In truth, I 
probably oversold myself to him. I had no other choice. I was 
twenty-seven years old at the time, and I had never built 
anything in Manhattan, nor had my father. Much as Victor 
liked me, I don’t think he could have justified going with me 
if he hadn’t believed our company was big and powerful. We 
had no formal name for the company when I met Victor, so I 
began to call it the Trump Organization. Somehow the word 
“organization” made it sound much bigger. Few people knew 
that the Trump Organization operated out of a couple of tiny 
offices on Avenue Z in Brooklyn. 

The other thing I promoted was our relationship with 
politicians, such as Abraham Beame, who was elected mayor 
of New York in November of 1973. My father did belong to 
the same Democratic club that Abe Beame came out of, and 
they did know each other. Like all developers, my father and I 
contributed money to Beame, and to other politicians. The 
simple fact is that contributing money to politicians is very 
standard and accepted for a New York City developer. We 
didn’t give any more to Beame than a lot of other developers 
did. In fact, it often seemed to me that, perhaps because we 
knew Beame personally, he almost went out of his way to 
avoid any appearance that he was doing us any special favors. 

Instead I spent most of the four years when Beame was 
mayor trying to promote the West 34th Street site for a 
convention center. It was by far the best site on the merits, and 



we eventually got nearly every big-name New York City 
businessman behind us. Still, Beame never came out in 
support of the site until a few weeks before he left office. Nor 
did he ever give it his official approval. It was Ed Koch, 
newly elected in 1978, who finally chose our site for the 
convention center. No one, so far as I know, has ever 
suggested that Donald Trump and Ed Koch are close personal 
friends. But that’s getting well ahead of the story. 

By building a close relationship with Victor from the start, I 
was able, in effect, to work for him, rather than to be just 
another buyer. That was terrific for me. For example, we drew 
up agreements giving me an exclusive option to purchase the 
60th Street and 30th Street yards—but subject to zoning, 
subject to approval by the court handling the Perm Central 
bankruptcy, subject to everything except my having to put up 
any money. The Penn Central even agreed to pay my 
development costs. It was remarkable in a way: the seller 
paying for the costs of the potential buyer. Still, you have to 
put it into perspective. What sounds like a stupid deal today 
was very different at a time when no one wanted to build 
anything, and the city was dying. 

Palmieri, in turn, helped give me credibility with the press. 
When he was asked by a reporter from Barrons why he chose 
Trump over others, he said, “Those properties were nothing 
but a black hole of undefinable risk. We interviewed all kinds 
of people who were interested in them, none of whom had 
what seemed like the kind of drive, backing, and imagination 



that would be necessary. Until this young guy Trump came 
along. He’s almost a throwback to the nineteenth century as a 
promoter. He’s larger than life.” 

At one point, when I was hyping my plans to the press but 
in reality getting nowhere, a big New York real estate guy told 
one of my close friends, “Trump has a great line of shit, but 
where are the bricks and mortar?” 

I remember being outraged when I heard that, and I didn’t 
speak to this guy for more than a year. But looking back, I can 
see he was right. It could all have gone up in smoke. If I 
hadn’t managed to make one of those first projects happen, if 
I hadn’t finally convinced the city to choose my West 34th 
Street site for its convention center and then gone on to 
develop the Grand Hyatt, I’d probably be back in Brooklyn 
today, collecting rents. I had a lot riding on those first 
projects. 

On July 29, 1974, we announced that the Trump 
Organization had secured options to purchase the two 
waterfront sites from the Penn Central—West 59th Street to 
West 72nd Street, and West 34th Street to West 39th Street— 
at a cost of $62 million. With no money down. The story 
made the front page of the New York Times. 

My original idea was to build middle-income housing on 
the sites at rents that seem ridiculously cheap today—$110 to 
$125 a room—but were considered moderately high at the 
time. I planned to seek financing from the Mitchell-Lama 



program, through which the city provided low-interest long¬ 
term mortgages and tax abatements to builders. The program 
had been initiated to encourage middle-income housing. 

The month before our announcement, Victor and I and 
some of his people met with Abe Beame to sound him out 
about our development plans. Although he was encouraging, 
from the moment we went public he refused to take any 
position until our plan had been considered by city agencies, 
including the City Planning Commission, the Board of 
Estimate, and the local community boards. He was a politician, 
and he wanted to see which way the winds were blowing 
before he took a stand. 

No sooner had I announced my plans publicly than other 
bidders for the railyards suddenly came out of the woodwork. 
Starrett Housing, for example, a company we were partners 
with on the Starrett City housing project in Brooklyn, made a 
bid of $150 million, contingent on financing and city 
approvals and all the rest. On the face of it, their bid was a lot 
higher than mine. 

I’m the first to admit that I am very competitive and that I’ll 
do nearly anything within legal bounds to win. Sometimes, 
part of making a deal is denigrating your competition. In this 
case, I happened to genuinely believe that the Starrett bid 
wasn’t legitimate, that the company would never close the deal 
and would not be able to successfully develop the site even if 
the deal did go through. The fact is that anyone can bid 



anything, particularly when there are all sorts of 
contingencies. The same thing could be said about my bid, 
except that by then I’d put in enough time and effort to have 
convinced Palmieri’s people that I was very serious and very 
committed. 

In the end, I managed to convince Palmieri that it made 
more sense to stick with my $62 million bid than to take a flier 
on Starrett. 

The irony is that less than a year after I announced my plans 
for the site—and beat my competition—the economic situation 
in New York City turned from bad to much worse. 

In February 1975, the Urban Development Corporation, the 
state agency that sold bonds to finance public housing, 
defaulted on more than $100 million of repayment on its 
bonds. 

In September 1975, Beame announced that because of the 
fiscal crisis, the city was suspending its own plans to finance 
the construction of virtually all new housing. 

In November 1975, the state announced that it, too, was 
suspending any financing of lower- and middle-income 
housing for the next five years—including a huge number of 
city projects that had already received preliminary approval. 

You couldn’t get up in the morning without running across 
some new headline about the city’s fiscal crisis. I can’t say that 
any of this made me truly fearful about the city’s future. Still, 



when it became clear that I wasn’t going to get any subsidies 
to build housing, I decided to try a new tack. 

I’d always thought that the West 34th Street site would be 
perfect for a new convention center. The problem was that 
nearly everyone else had other ideas. For starters, the city— 
with the support of many prominent local businessmen—had 
already spent more than three years studying and trying to 
develop another site by the Hudson River, at 44th Street. In 
the planning process alone, the city acknowledged, $13 
million had been spent, but people I knew told me that the 
number was actually closer to $30 million. 

Then, just weeks after the city said it wouldn’t finance any 
new housing, Beame announced that the city was also freezing 
further spending on development of the 44th Street location. I 
immediately hired Samuel H. Lindenbaum, a talented attorney 
who specialized in zoning, and who had been working until 
then on the 44th Street site. 

The other person I hired to help with the convention center 
was a highly dedicated woman named Louise Sunshine, who 
had extraordinary political connections. Louise had been the 
finance director for Hugh Carey when he ran for governor in 
1974. She was also treasurer of the state Democratic party. At 
first, she worked for me for practically no pay. Later, she 
became an executive in our company. 

But even as I was assembling a team to promote my site, the 
city and state were hatching their own alternative: to put the 



convention center in Battery Park City, opposite the World 
Trade Center in southern Manhattan. In my opinion, both sites 
—West 44th Street and Battery Park—were terrible choices. 
Malting my case was another matter. I wanted to wage the 
battle in public, but I was an unknown. If I was going to 
attract attention for my site and win support for it, I had to 
raise my profile. 

I decided to call my first news conference. Louise and 
Howard Rubenstein, a major New York public relations 
executive, helped attract support from several powerful 
people, including Manfred Ohrenstein, majority leader of the 
state senate, and Theodore Kheel, the labor negotiator, who 
was very powerful in New York politics. Kheel delivered a 
classic line at the press conference. “Placing the new 
convention center in Battery Park,” he said, “is like putting a 
nightclub in a graveyard.” For our part, we put up a huge 
banner that said, “Miracle on 34th Street,” and I announced, 
before a ton of reporters, that I could build my convention 
center for $110 million—or at least $150 million less than the 
city had estimated it would cost to build at West 44th Street. 

Not surprisingly, that raised some eyebrows and even got 
us some attention in the press. But there was scarcely an 
approving peep from the politicians. I discovered, for the first 
time but not the last, that politicians don’t care too much what 
things cost. It’s not their money. 

In promoting my site, the first thing I pointed out wherever 



I went was how important it was to build a convention center. 
A lot of people were saying that the best solution, in light of 
the city’s fiscal crisis, was to scrap the idea altogether. 

To me, that was classic shortsightedness. For example, in 
the face of a sales drop, most companies cut back on their 
advertising budgets. But in fact, you need advertising the most 
when people aren’t buying. Essentially, that’s what I said 
about a convention center. Building one, I argued, was critical 
to reviving the city’s image and, ultimately, to putting its 
economy back on track. 

I also told anyone who would listen how great my site was, 
and how horrible the alternatives were. I pointed out that at 
44th Street the convention center would have to be built on 
platforms over the water, which would be more costly, more 
problematic, and ultimately more time-consuming. I said that 
the 44th Street site was too small, that there was no room to 
expand it, and that because it was on the water, you’d have to 
cross under the crumbling West Side Highway to get to it. 
Finally, I made a big deal out of the fact that you needed 
something called a nonnavigable permit to build on the 44th 
Street site. A nonnavigable permit, which I became an expert 
about very quickly, is the federal approval required to build 
on certain waterways, and getting it requires an act of 
Congress. 

I was just as rough on the Battery Park site, which was an 
even more ridiculous location at the absolute southern tip of 



the city. I pointed out how remote it was from midtown, how 
far from hotels and entertainment, and how inconvenient to 
public transportation. I also circulated a state study which 
concluded that building a convention center at Battery Park 
would require major reconstruction of the West Side Highway 
leading to it, as well as the addition of at least 2,000 new hotel 
rooms. 

Most of all, I talked about what a wonderful location I had 
on West 34th Street. It was on the right side of the highway— 
the eastern side—which meant it was easily accessible. It was 
closer to subways and buses than the alternative sites. I 
continued to make the case that the center could be built more 
cheaply on my site, without dispossessing any tenants. Also, 
because my site was so big, there was plenty of room for 
expansion in the future. When a group of graduate students in 
a class taught by City Councilman Robert Wagner did a little 
study that rated our site the best, I managed to get hold of it 
and immediately christened it the Wagner Report. Its 
namesake wasn’t thrilled. 

Before long, I had everything going for me except the 
support of a few absolutely key people. Abe Beame was at the 
top of the list. Once he gave up on West 44th Street, Beame 
got behind Battery Park, and no matter how many great 
arguments I came up with for my site, he wouldn’t budge. 
Another major opponent was John Zuccotti, a deputy mayor 
under Beame. He began going around town bad-mouthing my 
site. The reason, I’m convinced, was that he didn’t want to 



admit that he’d wasted several years of his life and millions of 
dollars of public money on a location that never made sense in 
the first place. And that’s exactly what I said publicly. I 
accused him of being self-serving and petty and a half-dozen 
other things. He got pretty riled up. The battle received a lot of 
media attention, and ultimately, I think, it was good for my 
site. It became just another way to promote my site’s many 
advantages. 

In the end, we won by wearing everyone else down. We 
never gave up, and the opposition slowly began to melt away. 
In 1977 Beame appointed yet another committee to study the 
alternative sites, and it concluded that we did have the best 
site. On that basis, Beame finally gave us his support— 
although not his signature—just before leaving office at the 
end of the year. 

In January of 1978, Ed Koch took over as mayor and 
decided to do his own study. I figured we were back to square 
one. But things moved fast and once again our site came out 
ahead. Finally, in April 1978, the city and state announced that 
they had decided to purchase the 34th Street site and build the 
convention center there. It was a victory for me, but more 
symbolically than financially. For all the time I’d invested, I 
earned much less than I deserved—and nowhere near enough 
to justify the effort financially. 

As my deal with the Penn Central was structured, I was paid 
total compensation of about $833,000 based on the $12 



million price for the site that the city negotiated with Penn 
Central. In the end I offered to forgo my fee altogether, if the 
city would agree to name the convention center after my 
family. I’ve been criticized for trying to make that trade, but I 
have no apologies. There wouldn’t be a new convention 
center in New York today if it hadn’t been for the Trumps. 

More important, the city would have saved a fortune by 
letting me build the center, which I very much wanted to do. 
Instead, Ed Koch decided, by some logic I could never 
understand, that because I’d helped arrange the sale of the 
property, it was a conflict for me to be the builder as well. 
Eventually, I offered the city a deal that, frankly, was 
ridiculous for me. I said I would bring the entire job in for less 
than $200 million, and that if there were any overruns, I’d pay 
for them myself. You won’t find many builders willing to put 
themselves on the line that way. 

Instead, the city and state decided to oversee the job—and 
the result was perhaps the most horrendous construction 
delays and cost overruns in the history of the building 
business. A man named Richard Kahan was put in charge of 
the Urban Development Corporation, and ultimately it was his 
job to oversee the convention center project. Richard Kahan is 
a nice man, but he had visions of being the next Robert 
Moses. It wasn’t clear that he had the experience or the talent. 

One of the first things Kahan did was to hire I. M. Pei as his 
architect. I. M. Pei is a man with a terrific reputation, but in 



my view he often chooses the most expensive solution to a 
problem—and is virtually uncontrollable. Immediately, Pei 
decided to design a space frame for the center—a structural 
system that any professional builder will tell you is one of the 
most difficult to build and is especially vulnerable to cost 
overruns. This is particularly true when you’re dealing with 
the sort of huge space frame they needed for a convention 
center. 

From the very start, I told Kahan and his people that it was 
critical to build a parking garage simultaneously. How can 
you have a convention center without parking? They told me 
that a garage would hold up the city’s environmental-impact 
approval. “Look,” I said to them, “those approvals are only 
going to be tougher to get later, and at the very least you 
should begin a separate filing for the garage now, so you can 
at least start the process.” They ignored me, and now they 
have no parking, and no prospect of building any in the near 
future. 

The choice of where to put the entrance was equally ill- 
considered. If you put the entrance at the west, the whole 
center faces the Hudson River, which is a beautiful view. 
Instead, they built the entrance on the eastern side of the 
building—facing the traffic on Eleventh Avenue. 

As I watched all these mistakes being made, I became very 
angry and frustrated. In 1983, when it was clear the 
construction of the convention center was already a disaster of 



delays and overruns, I wrote a letter to William Stern, who by 
then had replaced Richard Kahan as president of the Urban 
Development Corporation. For a second time I offered, this 
time for no fee at all, to oversee the project and to assure that it 
would get completed quickly and without further cost 
overruns. 

My offer was refused—and a disaster eventually turned into 
a catastrophe. By the time the convention center was finally 
finished last year, it was four years behind schedule—and at 
least $250 million over budget. When you add interest—the 
carrying costs for all those years of construction—the total 
cost was probably $1 billion, or $700 million over budget. 

The construction was a terrible disgrace, and all the worse 
because no one raised a fuss about it. When I was invited to 
attend opening-day ceremonies in 1986, I refused. What 
happened at the convention center is that the city and state 
took a great piece of property and a great project and ruined it 
through terrible planning and ridiculous cost overruns. Even if 
the convention center is ultimately a success, it can never earn 
back all the money that was unnecessarily squandered to build 
it. 

The funny thing about devoting so much time and energy to 
the 34th Street site is that I never considered it anything to 
compare with the 60th Street yards. The problem was that 
developing 60th Street proved even more difficult than 
promoting 34th Street. The community opposition was 



stronger, the zoning was more complicated, and the banks 
were highly reluctant to finance a huge residential housing 
project in a city still teetering on the verge of bankruptcy. 

In 1979 I reluctantly let my option on the 60th Street yards 
expire so that I could concentrate on other deals that seemed 
more immediately promising. 

The first one, fittingly, was with Palmieri and the Penn 
Central—for the purchase of the Commodore Hotel. 



6 

GRAND HOTEL 


Reviving 42nd Street 


D uring the period when I was trying to make something 
happen with the two West Side yards, I got more and 
more friendly with Victor Palmieri and his people. One 
day, late in 1974, I was in Victor’s office, and I said to him, 
half-jokingly, “Listen, now that I’ve got the options on the 
two yards, what other properties does the Penn Central own 
that I can buy for nothing?” 

“As a matter of fact,” said Victor, “we have some hotels you 
might be interested in.” 

It so happened that the Penn Central owned several old 
hotels within a few blocks of each other in midtown: the 
Biltmore, the Barclay, the Roosevelt, and the Commodore. 
The first three were at least moderately successful, which 
meant buying them was likely to cost more money than I 
wanted to spend. The only one in real trouble was the 
Commodore, which had been losing money and defaulting on 
its property taxes for years. 




As it turned out, that was the best news Victor could have 
given me. I decided very quickly that the Commodore, in the 
heart of New York at 42nd Street and Park Avenue, next to 
Grand Central Station, had potentially the best location of any 
of the four hotels. 

I still remember walking over to look at the Commodore the 
day Victor first mentioned it to me. The hotel and the 
surrounding neighborhood were unbelievably run-down. Half 
the buildings were already in foreclosure. The brick facade of 
the Commodore was absolutely filthy, and the lobby was so 
dingy it looked like a welfare hotel. There was one of those 
sleazy flea markets operating on the ground floor with a 
bunch of boarded-up storefronts on either side and derelicts 
lying in the doorways. To most people, it would have been a 
very depressing scene. 

But as I approached the hotel, something completely 
different caught my eye. It was about nine in the morning, and 
there were thousands of well-dressed Connecticut and 
Westchester commuters flooding onto the streets from Grand 
Central Terminal and the subway stations below. The city was 
on the verge of bankruptcy, but what I saw was a superb 
location. Unless the city literally died, millions of affluent 
people were going to keep passing by this location every day. 
The problem was the hotel, not the neighborhood. If I could 
transform the Commodore, I was sure it could be a hit. 
Convenience alone would assure that. 



I went back and told Victor I was interested in making a 
deal for the Commodore. He was pleased, because everyone 
else considered it a loser. I also went to my father and told him 
I had a chance to make a deal for this huge midtown hotel. At 
first, he refused to believe I was serious. Later, he told a 
reporter that his initial reaction to my idea was that “buying 
the Commodore at a time when even the Chrysler Building is 
in receivership is like fighting for a seat on the Titanic 

I wasn’t naive. I saw potential, but I also recognized a 
downside. I could envision a huge home run, but I also knew 
that failing could bury me. From the very first day I went to 
work on the deal, I tried to keep my risk to an absolute 
minimum, and financially, I succeeded. But as the months 
went by, the deal became more and more complicated and 
difficult. I kept investing more time and more energy, and the 
stakes rose for reasons unrelated to money. I could talk big for 
only so long. Eventually I had to prove—to the real estate 
community, to the press, to my father—that I could deliver the 
goods. 

The Commodore deal was basically a juggling act, but a 
much trickier one than I originally imagined. First, I had to 
keep Palmieri’s people believing I was their best bet to buy the 
hotel, while trying to avoid, for as long as I could, putting 
down any cash. At the same time, I had to convince an 
experienced hotel operator to come in with me before I 
actually had a deal, knowing that such a partner would give 
me more credibility with the banks when I went to seek 



financing. And even a great partner wasn’t enough. I also had 
to try to persuade city officials that it was in their interest to 
give me a totally unprecedented tax break. That savings, I 
knew, would make it far easier to prove to the banks that the 
numbers for my hotel made sense—at a time when they were 
loathe to lend money even for projects in good 
neighborhoods. 

The funny thing is that the city’s desperate circumstances 
became my biggest weapon. With Palmieri, I could argue that 
I was the only developer around who would even consider 
buying a loser hotel in a decaying neighborhood in a dying 
city. With the banks, I could point to their moral obligation to 
finance new developments as a way to help get the city back 
on its feet. And with city officials, I could legitimately argue 
that in return for a huge tax abatement, I’d be able to create 
thousands of new construction and service jobs, help save a 
neighborhood, and ultimately share with the city any profits 
the hotel earned. 

In the late fall of 1974, I began talking seriously with 
Palmieri about a deal. Eight or nine months before, the Penn 
Central had invested $2 million on a renovation of the 
Commodore that was the equivalent of applying a coat of wax 
to a car that’s just been in a major accident. Even after the 
renovation, the Penn Central was projecting a huge loss for 
1974, and that didn’t even include the $6 million that the hotel 
already owed in back taxes. The Commodore was a terrible 
cash drain on a bankrupt company. 



In a short time we came up with a basic structure for a deal. 
In simple terms, I would take an option to purchase the hotel 
at a price of $10 million, subject to my being able to get tax 
abatement, financing, and a hotel company partner—subject, 
in other words, to my putting the entire deal together before I 
made the purchase. In the meantime, I would put down a 
nonrefundable $250,000 for an exclusive option. There was 
just one problem: I wasn’t too eager to fork over even 
$250,000 on a deal that was still very much a long shot. In 
1974, $250,000 was a huge sum of money for me. So I 
stalled. Contracts were drawn up, but I had my lawyers find 
plenty of little legal points to argue back and forth over. In the 
meantime, I went to work to try to put the rest of the deal 
together. 

What I needed first, I decided, was a really fantastic design 
—one that would get people excited. I set up a meeting with a 
young, talented architect named Der Scutt. We met at 
Maxwell’s Plum on a Friday night, and right away I liked 
Der’s enthusiasm. When I told him what I had in mind, he 
immediately started making sketches on one of the menus. 

The key thing, I told Der, was to create something that 
looked absolutely brand-new. I was convinced that half the 
reason the Commodore was dying was because it looked so 
gloomy and dark and dingy. My idea, from the beginning, 
was to build a new skin directly over the brick—bronze, if it 
could be done economically, or glass. I wanted a sleek, 
contemporary look, something with sparkle and excitement 



that would make people stop and take notice. And it was 
obvious to me that Der understood what I had in mind. 

After we ate, I took Der and another friend back to my 
apartment, the tiny studio I was still living in on Third 
Avenue, and I asked him what he thought about my furniture. 
Some people would just have said, “Fantastic, great,” but Der 
didn’t do that. “There’s too much of it,” he said, and he started 
moving furniture around, and even pushed several pieces out 
into the hallway. When he finished, he’d managed to make the 
apartment look much bigger, which I liked. 

I hired Der and paid him to come up with sketches that we 
could use in our presentations to the city and to banks. I also 
told him to make it appear that we’d spent a huge sum on the 
drawings. A good-looking presentation goes a long way. 

By the spring of 1975, we were pretty far along on a 
design. Then, one evening in the middle of April, Der called 
to tell me that he’d been fired from the architectural firm he 
worked for, Kahn & Jacobs/Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum. I 
knew he hadn’t been getting along with his bosses. At the 
same time, I didn’t want to hold up the project. I needed the 
resources and the prestige of a big firm to do a job this size, 
and I figured it was going to be a while before Der made a 
new association. But he formed an association very quickly 
with a firm named Gruzen & Partners, and I was able to use 
the situation to my advantage. The Obata group desperately 
wanted to keep the job, and so, of course, did Der. The 



competition gave me an opportunity to negotiate a lower 
architectural fee, which I did. In the end I went with Der, and 
paid him a very modest fee. I also told him that doing this job 
would pay off big in the end. “This is going to be a 
monumental project,” I said. “It’s going to make you into a 
star.” Der wasn’t thrilled about his fee, but later he admitted 
that I’d been right about the impact that doing the Hyatt—and 
subsequently Trump Tower—had on his career. 

During this same period, early 1975, I began to look for an 
operator for the hotel. The truth was that I knew nothing about 
the hotel business. I’ve learned a lot since then, and today I 
operate my own hotels. But at the time, I was only twenty- 
seven years old, and I’d hardly even slept in a hotel. 
Nonetheless, I was trying to buy this monster building, 
1,500,000 square feet, and proposing to create a 1,400-room 
hotel—the largest since the construction of the New York 
Hilton twenty-five years earlier. It seemed clear that I needed 
an experienced operator. I also figured it probably had to be 
one of the large chains, and I wasn’t totally wrong. The chains 
may not be very exciting, but they do give you access to a 
national reservations system, good referral business, and basic 
management expertise. 

From the start, Hyatt was at the top of my list. Hilton 
seemed a little backward and old, Sheraton didn’t excite me 
for much the same reasons, and Holiday Inns and Ramada Inn 
didn’t have enough class. I liked the Hyatt image. Their hotels 
had a modern look, light and clean and a little glossy, and that 



was what I had in mind architecturally for the Commodore. In 
addition, Hyatt was very strong on conventions, which I 
thought could be a big business for a hotel in the Grand 
Central area. 

I also liked Hyatt because I thought I might have more 
leverage with them in making a deal. Chains like Hilton and 
Sheraton already had hotels in New York City, and they 
weren’t necessarily hungry to build new ones, particularly 
with the city in the dumps. Hyatt, on the other hand, was very 
successful in other cities but still had no flagship presence in 
New York City, and I’d heard they wanted one very badly. 

In late 1974 I called up the president of Hyatt, a guy named 
Hugo M. Friend, Jr., and we arranged to meet. I wasn’t 
terribly impressed with Skip Friend, but it turned out that I 
was right about Hyatt’s desire for a New York flagship, and 
we began to discuss a partnership on the Commodore. Fairly 
rapidly, I made a tentative deal with him, full of contingencies. 
I was very happy and very proud of myself. Then two days 
later I got a call and Skip said, “No, I’m sorry, we can’t do the 
deal that way.” This became a pattern. We’d negotiate new 
terms, shake hands, a few days would go by, and the deal 
would suddenly be off again. Finally, a guy I’d become 
friendly with at Hyatt, a high-level executive, called. “I’d like 
to make a suggestion,” he said. “I think you should call Jay 
Pritzker and deal with him directly.” 

I’d barely heard of Pritzker, which tells you something 



about how young I was at the time. I knew, vaguely, that the 
Pritzker family owned a controlling interest in Hyatt, but that 
was about all. My Hyatt friend explained that Pritzker was the 
guy who really ran the company. Suddenly it dawned on me 
why my deals kept coming apart: if you’re going to make a 
deal of any significance, you have to go to the top. 

It comes down to the fact that everyone underneath the top 
guy in a company is just an employee. An employee isn’t 
going to fight for your deal. He’s fighting for his salary 
increase, or his Christmas bonus, and the last thing he wants to 
do is upset his boss. So he’ll present your case with no real 
opinion. To you, he might be very enthusiastic, but to his boss 
he’ll say, “Listen, a guy named Trump from New York wants 
to make such and such a deal, and here are the pros and cons, 
and what do you want to do?” If it turns out his boss likes the 
idea, he’ll keep supporting you. But if the boss doesn’t like it, 
the employee will say, “Yes, I agree, but I wanted to present it 
to you.” 

By now it was the early spring of 1975, and I called Jay 
Pritzker, and he seemed happy to hear from me. Hyatt was 
based in Chicago, but Pritzker told me he was coming to New 
York the next week, and we should meet. Could I pick him up 
at the airport? I didn’t go around in limousines at the time, so I 
picked him up in my own car. Unfortunately it was a very hot 
day, and it was extremely uncomfortable in the car. If it 
bothered Jay, though, he didn’t show it. I realized right then 
that Jay is very focused when it comes to business. He can be 



fun-loving when he’s relaxed, but mostly he’s tough and 
sharp, and he plays very close to the vest. Fortunately I had no 
problem with that, so we got along pretty well. The other 
thing about Jay is that he doesn’t much trust people in 
business, which is the way I tend to be. We were wary of each 
other, but I think there was also a mutual respect from the 
start. 

We managed to make a deal in a short time. We agreed to 
be equal partners. I’d build the hotel and Hyatt would manage 
it once it was built. More important than coming to a tentative 
agreement was the fact that from then on I was able to deal 
directly with Jay when difficulties arose. To this day, though 
we’ve had our disagreements, the partnership is strong 
because Jay and I can talk straight to one another. 

On May 4, 1975, we called a joint press conference and 
announced that we’d agreed, as partners, to purchase, gut, and 
fully renovate the Commodore—assuming we could get 
financing and tax abatement. The announcement of the 
partnership with Hyatt, coupled with Der’s preliminary 
drawings and rough construction-cost estimates, finally gave 
me some ammunition to bring to the banks. By then I had 
hired Henry Pearce, a real estate broker with a special 
expertise in financing. Together, we went calling. 

Henry Pearce was the head of a firm called Pearce, Mayer, 
and Greer, and he was a fantastic guy. He was in his late 
sixties, but he had more energy than most twenty-year-olds, 



and he was unrelenting in his quest for financing for this job. 
His persistence helped, and so did his age. We’d go in 
together to see these very conservative bankers, most of 
whom had never heard of Donald Trump. In many ways I 
was much more conservative than Henry, but it reassured 
these bankers to see me alongside this white-haired guy with 
whom they’d been dealing forever. 

Our pitch was very much the one I made when I first met 
Victor Palmieri. I would talk about the great Trump 
Organization and all we had done. I would push very hard the 
fact that we built on time and on budget, because I knew that 
the banks were scared to death of cost overruns, which can 
kill even a good loan. We would show these bankers drawings 
and scale models of this huge gleaming new hotel I planned to 
build. We would talk about how the job was going to turn the 
neighborhood around, how it would create thousands of jobs. 
We would go on and on about the fantastic, incomparable 
Hyatt Company, and we’d even mention the great tax 
abatement we hoped to get from the city. This last point would 
usually stir some interest, but unfortunately we were in 
something of a Catch-22. Until we had our financing in place, 
the city wasn’t interested in seriously discussing tax 
abatement. And without tax abatement, the banks weren’t very 
interested in talking about financing. 

Eventually we decided to take a new tack. Realizing that the 
positive approach wasn’t working, we tried to play to their 
guilt and their fear and their sense of moral obligation. Forget 



us, we’d say; you owe it to New York. The city is in trouble, 
but it’s still a great city, and it’s our city, and if you don’t 
believe in it, if you won’t invest in it, how can you expect it to 
turn around? If you lend millions of dollars to Third World 
countries and suburban-shopping-mall magnates, don’t you 
also owe some obligation to your own city? 

Nothing seemed to work. On one occasion, we found a 
bank that seemed ready to say yes. Then, at the last moment, 
the guy in charge raised some trivial technical issue that just 
killed the whole deal. This guy was what I call an institutional 
man, the type who has virtually no emotion. To him it’s 
purely a job, and all he wants to do is go home at five and 
forget about it. You’re better off dealing with a total killer 
with real passion. When he says no, sometimes you can talk 
him out of it. You rant and you rave, and he rants and raves 
back, and you end up making a deal. But when a machine 
says no, it’s very tough. We gave this guy every argument in 
the world, and after listening, he didn’t flinch and he didn’t 
move. He just said very slowly and steadfastly, “The answer is 
no, Donald. No. No. No.” After that experience, I remember 
saying to Henry, “Let’s just take this deal and shove it.” But 
Henry refused to give up. He and Jerry Schrager, my lawyer, 
kept me going, and we continued to push. 

It was increasingly clear that the only way I was going to 
get financing was if the city gave me tax abatement. My hope 
rested in a program called the Business Investment Incentive 
Policy, which the city adopted in early 1975. It was designed, 



in a bad market, to encourage commercial development by 
providing tax abatements to developers. In the middle of 
1975, I decided to approach the city, even though I hadn’t 
found financing. To most people, that would have been 
ridiculous. I took it one step further. I went in and asked for 
the world—for an unprecedented tax abatement—on the 
assumption that even if I got cut back, the break might still be 
sufficient. In a funny way, it was like a high stakes poker 
game in which neither side has very strong cards so both are 
forced to bluff. By this point, I almost couldn’t afford to walk 
away from the deal if I wanted to maintain any credibility. The 
city, meanwhile, was more desperate than ever to encourage 
development. 

I first made my case to the city in October 1975, and it was 
direct. The Commodore was losing money and deteriorating 
fast. The Grand Central neighborhood was turning into a 
slum. The Hyatt hotel chain was ready to come to New York, 
but there was no way we could afford to put up millions to 
build a new hotel unless the city gave me some relief on 
property taxes. 

The city’s economic development people agreed to structure 
a program in which we’d effectively be partners. The city 
would give me a total abatement of property taxes for forty 
years. In return, I would pay the city a yearly fee, and a share 
of any profits the hotel made. The mechanism was fairly 
complicated. First, I would buy the Commodore from the 
Penn Central for $10 million, $6 million of which would 



immediately go to the city to pay off the back taxes. Then I 
would sell the hotel to the city for one dollar and they would 
lease it back to me for ninety-nine years. My rent, paid in lieu 
of all property taxes, would begin at $250,000 a year and rise 
by the fortieth year to $2.7 million. Also, I would pay the city 
a percentage of the profits. At the end, I’d be paying the 
equivalent of full property taxes based on the hotel’s assessed 
value as of the time we were making our deal. 

The whole arrangement was subject to approval by the 
city’s Board of Estimate, which met to consider it for the first 
time in late December 1975. A week before the meeting, I 
went to Victor Palmieri and explained that if he wanted the 
city to take our abatement seriously, we had better make it 
clear that the Commodore was in deep trouble and that it 
might not survive much longer. He agreed with me. On 
December 12, Palmieri announced that the Penn Central had 
lost another $1.2 million on the Commodore during 1975, 
was anticipating worse losses for 1976, and as a result 
intended to close the hotel permanently no later than June 30, 
1976. 

Two days later, there was another significant 
announcement, which I hadn’t anticipated. Portman 
Associates, a company that had spent the past two years trying 
to get financing for a huge new hotel across town in Times 
Square, revealed that it was scrapping the project because it 
had been unable to get bank support. In a way, that was bad 
for me, because I needed all the evidence I could get that 



investing in New York made sense. On the other hand, in 
dealing with the city, I could point to the Portman fiasco as 
clear proof that the only chance I had to get financing was if 
they gave me my tax abatement. 

Early in 1976, the Board of Estimate decided to switch the 
structure of the tax-abatement program. Instead of my selling 
the hotel to the city and then leasing it back, I would do the 
whole deal through the state’s Urban Development 
Corporation. The reasons were technical, but actually the 
change was advantageous to me. Unlike the city, the UDC has 
the power of condemnation, meaning the statutory right to 
evict quickly and efficiently—something that a private 
developer can spend months or even years trying to do. 

By April, however, the Board of Estimate still hadn’t 
considered my tax abatement, and opposition to it had begun 
to intensify. The loudest chorus came from other hotel 
owners. Albert Formicola, head of the city’s Hotel 
Association, argued that the tax abatement would give me an 
unfair advantage competing against the other hotel owners in 
the city who paid Ml property taxes. The head of the Hilton, 
Alphonse Salamone, said he could understand a ten-year tax 
abatement, but that everyone ought to compete as equals after 
that. Even Harry Helmsley, who was more successful and less 
envious than most of my competitors, said he thought the deal 
was a little excessive. Just before the Board of Estimate vote, 
three city councilmen held a news conference in front of the 
Commodore to denounce the deal. I didn’t take it personally. 



They were politicians. They sensed an issue that might play 
with the voters and the press, so they jumped on the 
bandwagon. 

I worried about the growing opposition, but publicly my 
posture was to take the offensive and concede nothing to my 
critics. When a reporter later asked me why I got a forty-year 
tax abatement, I answered, “Because I didn’t ask for fifty.” 

The basic case against us was that the city was giving me 
too rich a deal. The length of the tax abatement was only part 
of it. In addition, critics said, there shouldn’t be a cap on the 
profits I shared with the city. Also, if my maximum rent was 
going to be equivalent to the full property-tax assessment as of 
1974, then that number should at least be adjustable, so that it 
could take into account the possibility that real estate values— 
and assessments—might rise over the years. 

If I’d been the city official in charge of negotiating with me, 
I might have made those same arguments. But while other 
hotel owners were great at carping, not one of them made an 
alternative offer for the Commodore. Admittedly, most 
everyone assumed I had an exclusive option on the property 
—and it helped that the city didn’t dispute that. Several 
months earlier, a city official had requested that I send along a 
copy of my option agreement with the Penn Central. I did— 
but it was signed only by me, and not the railroad, because I 
had yet to put down my $250,000. No one even noticed that 
until almost two years later, when a reporter doing a story on 



the deal called the city and asked to see the original agreement. 

Two weeks before the Board of Estimate was scheduled for 
the third time to vote on my plan, an alternative offer finally 
was made for the Commodore. It came from a company that 
owned a bunch of low-rent hotels in bad neighborhoods. If 
the city could get title to the Commodore, these people said, 
they’d be willing to buy it, put up a couple of million dollars 
toward a renovation, share all profits with the city, and forgo a 
cap. Because it was a half-baked offer from a questionable 
group, I think it actually helped my case. The last thing the 
Commodore needed was a second-rate renovation by a third- 
rate hotel operator. 

The clincher, I’m convinced, came from Palmieri and Penn 
Central. The one thing that nobody wanted was to see the 
Commodore shut down and boarded up. On May 12, Palmieri 
announced that the Penn Central was going to close the 
Commodore permanently in six days—exactly one day before 
the Board of Estimate had scheduled, for the fourth time, a 
vote on my tax abatement. Immediately, the critics called the 
announcement a pressure tactic. I can’t say I was unhappy 
about the timing, but the fact was that the Penn Central had 
revealed six months earlier its plans to close the hotel by 
summer. In the meantime, occupancy had dropped from 46 
percent the previous year to 33 percent. Moreover, losses for 
the full year of operation in 1976 were projected at $4.6 
million. 



On May 19, all the local papers carried front-page stories 
about the last tenants moving out of the Commodore, the 
hundreds of employees who were now looking for work, and 
the dread that local shopowners were feeling in anticipation of 
a boarded-up hotel. The stories certainly didn’t hurt me. On 
May 20, the Board of Estimate voted unanimously—8 to 0— 
to give me the full tax-abatement program I’d sought. Over 
the course of the forty years, that abatement will save me tens 
of millions of dollars. The battle was more than worth it. 

Whatever my critics may have felt, a New York Times 
editorial ten days later made my case better than I could have. 
“The alternative,” said the editorial, “is the Commodore 
boarded up and in tax arrears. Beyond the tax loss, this would 
be a visual wound and a serious depressant for one of the 
city’s prime areas.” 

But incredibly, getting the tax abatement still didn’t 
convince the banks we had a viable enterprise. When you look 
back, it seems almost hard to believe that the banks could 
doubt our numbers. What it shows you is how bad things 
were. In 1974, the Commodore was charging an average of 
$20.80 a night for a room, and as long as occupancy remained 
above 40 percent, the hotel nearly broke even. In our entirely 
new hotel, we projected charging an average of $48 a night 
for our rooms, with an average occupancy rate of 60 percent. 
Those were hardly great numbers, but the banks insisted we 
were being too optimistic. As it turned out, by the time we 
opened our doors in September 1980, the city had turned 



around, and we were able to charge $115 for a single room, 
with an average occupancy of more than 80 percent. By July 
1987, we’d raised the room rate to $175, and now we average 
almost 90 percent occupancy. 

In the end, we got our financing from two institutions. The 
first was Equitable Life Assurance Society, which, in addition 
to its other businesses, owns a lot of real estate. George 
Peacock, the head of Equitable Real Estate, agreed to put up 
$35 million for the Grand Hyatt, primarily because he and his 
people thought it would be good for the city. The other 
institution was the Bowery Savings Bank, which happened to 
have its headquarters right across the street from the 
Commodore and agreed to lend $45 million. Their motivation 
was practical: they didn’t want to see their own neighborhood 
go to hell. 

I could have saved millions and millions of dollars just by 
refurbishing the old Commodore rather than creating a brand- 
new building. Indeed, almost everyone fought against my 
spending the extra money on a major renovation. From the 
day we went public with our plans to cover the Commodore’s 
brick facade with an entirely new curtain wall of highly 
reflective glass, critics and preservationists were furious. They 
were outraged that I wasn’t making some attempt to fit in with 
the architecture in the rest of the neighborhood—the classical 
look of Grand Central Station and the ornamented limestone- 
and-brick office buildings up and down the block. 



In my view, staying with that look would have been suicide. 
I said to these critics, “Hey, fellas, do me a favor and don’t tell 
me about these great monuments, because the Chrysler 
Building is in foreclosure, the neighborhood is a disaster, and 
it’s obvious something’s not working. If you think I’m going 
to leave the facade of the old Commodore the way it is, you’re 
crazy. There’s no way.” 

It’s strange how things can turn around. Many of the same 
critics and preservationists who hated the original concept of 
my building now love it. What they discovered is that by 
choosing this highly reflective glass, I’ve created four walls of 
mirrors. Now when you go across 42nd Street or go over the 
Park Avenue ramp and look up at the Grand Hyatt, you see 
the reflection of Grand Central Terminal, the Chrysler 
Building, and all the other landmarks, which otherwise you 
might not have noticed at all. 

The other new element that had a dramatic effect was the 
lobby. Most hotel lobbies in New York are dull and 
unexciting. I was determined to make ours an event, a place 
people wanted to visit. We chose a luxurious brown paradisio 
marble for the floors. We used beautiful brass for the railing 
and columns. We built a 170-foot glass-enclosed restaurant 
pitched out over 42nd Street, which no one had ever done 
before. I’m convinced that if I’d left the Commodore the way 
it was—old and dull and nondescript—it would have had 
absolutely no impact, and it wouldn’t be doing the business it 
is doing today. 



The Grand Hyatt opened in September 1980, and it was a 
hit from the first day. Gross operating profits now exceed $30 
million a year. Hyatt’s job was to manage the hotel, so my role 
was essentially over. But the fact is I still had a 50 percent 
interest, and I’m not exactly the hands-off type. That caused 
some problems at the start. I would send over one of my 
executives, or more often my wife, just to see how things were 
going, and Hyatt wasn’t happy about that. One day I got a call 
from the head of all the Hyatt Hotels, Patrick Foley, and he 
said, “Donald, we have a problem. The manager of the hotel is 
going nuts, because your wife comes by, and she’ll see dust in 
the corner of the lobby and call over a porter to clean it up. Or 
she’ll see a doorman in a uniform that’s not pressed, and 
she’ll tell him to get it cleaned. Unfortunately, my manager 
happens to be a guy who has a problem with women to start 
off with. But in his defense, he’s running a hotel with 1,500 
employees, and there’s got to be a chain of command or else a 
business like this just doesn’t work.” 

So I said to Pat, “I understand what you’re saying, and I 
agree with you that it’s a real problem, but as long as I own 
fifty percent of the building, I’m not going to walk in and 
make believe everything’s fine if it isn’t.” Pat suggested we 
meet the following week. I wanted to work this out because I 
like Pat, and I respect him, and I think he is an extraordinary 
executive. Pat has one of those great Irish personalities. He’ll 
walk through the Hyatt Regency in Washington, D.C., or 
West Palm Beach, Florida, and he’ll know everyone’s name, 



he’ll remember their families, he’ll kiss the chef, tell the porter 
he’s doing a great job, say hello to the lifeguard and the 
maids. By the time he leaves an hour later, everyone feels 
uplifted, like they’re ten feet tall. 

So I met with Pat, and he said, “I’ve decided what to do. 
I’m going to change managers. I’m going to put in one of my 
best guys. He’s Eastern European, like your wife. He’s also 
very flexible, and they’ll get along great. That way, she can 
come in and talk to anyone she wants, and everyone will be 
happy.” 

Sure enough, Pat made the switch, and then his new 
manager did something brilliant. He began to bombard us 
with trivia. He’d call up several times a week, and he’d say, 
“Donald, we want your approval to change the wallpaper on 
the fourteenth floor” or “We want to introduce a new menu in 
one of the restaurants” or “We are thinking of switching to a 
new laundry service.” They’d also invite us to all of their 
management meetings. The guy went so far out of his way to 
solicit our opinions and involve us in the hotel that finally I 
said, “Leave me alone, do whatever you want, just don’t 
bother me.” What he did was the perfect ploy, because he got 
what he wanted not by fighting but by being positive and 
friendly and solicitous. 

As successful as our partnership has turned out to be, there 
was one small clause in the deal that I think may be even more 
valuable than my half-ownership of the Grand Hyatt. It’s 



something called an exclusive covenant, and its effect is to 
permanently prohibit Hyatt from building competing hotels in 
the five boroughs of New York without my permission. 

I first tried to get the covenant from Jay Pritzker at the time 
we made our deal, but he refused. Jay is a smart guy, and he 
wasn’t about to foreclose the future expansion of his hotel 
chain in one of the biggest cities in the world. We finally got 
to the closing, and just before we all sat down, I was alone 
with an executive from the bank. I pointed out that this was a 
rather big and risky investment the bank was making, and that 
one way to further protect the loan might be to insist on a 
restrictive covenant, so that Hyatt couldn’t throw up a second 
hotel two years later, right down the street. The banker saw 
the implications immediately. He stormed into the room where 
the Hyatt people were sitting, and he said, “Hey, fellas, we’re 
putting up tens of millions of dollars, which is a lot of money, 
and we’re not going to make this loan unless we get a 
covenant from Hyatt saying you won’t open up any other 
hotels in New York.” 

I was taking a chance, because right then and there the 
whole financing could have fallen through. But what I had 
going for me was that Jay Pritzker wasn’t at the closing. The 
executive representing Hyatt tried to reach Jay, but it turned 
out he was off in Nepal, mountain climbing, and he couldn’t 
be reached. Meanwhile, the bank gave Hyatt one hour to make 
a decision, or that was the end of the financing. While we 
were waiting, I wrote up a covenant myself. In effect, it said 



that Hyatt can’t open any competing hotels in the New York 
area, including the two airports. The only exception is the 
right to build one small luxury hotel—which I don’t believe 
would be economically feasible anyway. And before the hour 
was up they agreed to sign the document I’d written. 

I now have in my will a clause describing the importance of 
that restrictive covenant, just on the chance that one of my 
heirs happens not to be that sharp. What I don’t want, after 
I’m gone, is for some nice, smooth person from Hyatt to come 
to one of my heirs and say, “Listen, you wouldn’t mind if we 
threw up a little noncompetitive hotel at Kennedy Airport, 
would you?” The simple fact is that Hyatt would love to build 
more hotels. By retaining the right to say yes or no, I own 
something very valuable. 

I’ve already seen the proof. A. N. Pritzker, a wonderful 
man who was the patriarch of his family and who died 
recently, used to call me frequently when he came to New 
York. A.N. and his son Jay were very different men. What 
they had in common was brilliance, but where Jay keeps very 
much to himself, A.N. was extremely effusive and outgoing, 
almost a teddy bear. They were a perfect combination. A.N. 
built the foundation of the company from nothing, and he got 
the banks to back him not because he had great assets but 
because they loved him. Now the company has a huge base, 
and Jay, who is a much cooler personality, doesn’t need the 
banks to love him. He can be very tough and they still want to 
do business with him. 



Anyway, A.N. would come to New York, and he’d call and 
he’d say “Hi ya, Don, I’m here visiting, and I’d love to stop 
over and just say hello to you for a couple of seconds.” And 
I’d say, “A.N., I know what you’re doing. You want to build 
a hotel someplace in New York, don’t you?” And he’d say, 
“I’d love you to let us do that, Don, because it’s not going to 
hurt you, and it’s good for us, and it’s good for everyone.” 
And when A.N. would do that, I’d find some way of 
changing the subject, because I liked him so much that I never 
had the heart to say no to him directly. 

There are very few people I feel that way about. A.N. died 
in 1986, and I happened to have an extremely important 
business meeting in my office on the day of his funeral in 
Chicago. It was a deal I very much wanted to make, and I’d 
been planning it for months, and people were flying in from 
all over to be there. But I canceled the meeting in order to go 
to Chicago, and as it turned out, I was never able to make that 
particular deal. I have no regrets. There are some people in 
your life you just want to pay your respects to, no matter what 
it involves. And in the end, I think one reason my partnership 
with Hyatt has remained so strong—beside the fact that the 
hotel has been so successful—is that I always felt such 
affection for A. N. Pritzker. 



7 

TRUMP TOWER 


The Tiffany Location 


I T WAS NOT an auspicious start, my meeting with Franklin 
Jarman. 

From the time I took an apartment in Manhattan in 1971 
and began walking the streets, the site that excited me the most 
was the eleven-story building at 57th Street and Fifth Avenue 
that housed Bonwit Teller. The main attraction was location, 
but in addition, it was on an unusually large piece of property. 
In my mind, that combination made it perhaps the greatest 
single piece of real estate in New York City. There was the 
potential to build a great building in a prime location. 

Bonwit was owned by Genesco, a company founded in the 
late 1950s by a gentleman named W. Maxey Jarman, who 
built it into a real high-flying conglomerate. Maxey started off 
with a shoe company, and then he began buying other shoe 
companies, and eventually he moved into retail stores, 
purchasing Tiffany and Henri Bendel, and Bonwit Teller. But 
then, in the mid-1970s, a tremendous battle began to take 
shape between Maxey and his son, Franklin. They were both 




strong guys with their own ideas and they both wanted 
control. It became so bitter that they finally came to blows at a 
stockholder meeting. Since I am so close to my father, I found 
the whole thing hard to believe, but the bottom line was that 
Franklin finally managed to push his father out and take over. 
And so, in 1975, it was Franklin I called to discuss my interest 
in Bonwit. 

At the time, I really had no track record. I was trying to get 
the Grand Hyatt off the ground, and I was still fighting for my 
convention center site, and nothing had yet gelled. But for 
whatever reason, Franklin Jarman was willing to see me. We 
met, and I told him straight out that I would love to buy the 
Bonwit Teller store and building. I knew this was a tough sell, 
so I tried to find ways to make the deal sound more attractive. 
I suggested, for example, that I would build above his store, 
and that he could keep it open during construction. That’s not 
really feasible, but the point was that I would have done 
almost anything to get that piece of property. 

Even before I’d finished my pitch, I could see from the 
look on Franklin’s face that he thought this was perhaps the 
most preposterous thing he had ever heard. When I was done, 
he said to me, very politely, but also very firmly, “You’ve got 
to be crazy if you think there’s any way we’d ever sell this 
incredible site.” We shook hands and I left, believing that 
under no circumstances would I or anybody else ever 
purchase this property. It was a dead issue. 



Even so, I didn’t give up. I began writing letters to Franklin 
Jarman. First, I wrote to thank him for seeing me. A couple of 
months later, I wrote to ask if he might reconsider. When I got 
no answer and a few more months had gone by, I wrote again 
and said I’d love to drop by and see him again. More time 
passed, and I wrote another letter, suggesting a whole new 
way to make the deal. I was relentless, even in the face of the 
total lack of encouragement, because much more often than 
you’d think, sheer persistence is the difference between 
success and failure. In this case, Franklin Jarman never 
budged from his original position. But as it happened, the 
letters I wrote eventually did have an impact. 

Almost three years passed after my first meeting with 
Franklin. During that time, Genesco began to experience very 
serious financial problems. I didn’t give any of it a second 
thought until one evening in June 1978, when I picked up 
Business Week magazine and read an article about a 
management change at Genesco. The banks, trying to save the 
company from declaring bankruptcy, had insisted that a new 
chief executive be put in charge. The man’s name was John 
Hanigan, and he was something of a turnaround artist. He’d 
just successfully saved AMF-Brunswick, which had been 
ready to go down the drain. His specialty was something 
called pruning, which is just a nice way of saying that he took 
companies apart. In other words, he’d sell, sell, sell the assets, 
get rid of the debt, and pay off the banks. The key, for a guy 
like Hanigan, was that he came to companies without any 



emotional attachment to its people or its products. As a result, 
he had no trouble being ruthless. He was a tough, smart, 
totally bottom-line-oriented guy. 

At nine sharp, the morning after I read the article, I called 
Genesco, and I got Hanigan on the phone. He’d just begun his 
new job, but to my surprise, he said, “I’ll bet I know what 
you’re calling about.” 

“You do?” I said. 

And he said, “Yeah, you’re the guy who has been writing 
all those letters about wanting to buy Bonwit Teller. When 
would you like to meet?” 

“As soon as possible,” I said. 

He said, “Can you be here in half an hour?” 

It just shows you that sometimes making a deal comes 
down to timing. Somebody else might have called him a few 
days or a few weeks before me, and the whole thing could 
have turned out differently. Instead, I went to see him, and we 
had a very good meeting. It was clear that the company 
needed cash very badly and very quickly, and that he had no 
reluctance about selling Bonwit, or any other asset, for that 
matter. It was like a giant garage sale. By the time I left, I 
thought there was a good chance we’d make a deal very 
quickly. 

Then something funny happened. Jack Hanigan suddenly 
refused to take my phone calls. I must have called him ten or 



fifteen times over a period of the next several days, but I never 
got through. I figured that some other bidder had come along, 
and that in any case I was in trouble. I asked Louise Sunshine 
to speak to her friend Marilyn Evans, whose husband, David, 
owned a shoe company that he’d sold to Genesco several 
years before. He’d become a fairly large stockholder in 
Genesco, and that gave them some clout. Marilyn said they’d 
speak to Hanigan on my behalf, and almost immediately he 
called me back. I never found out what the delay had been 
about, but Hanigan suggested we have another meeting. This 
time I brought my lawyer, Jerry Schrager, and we were able to 
make a deal. It was really quite simple. Genesco owned the 
Bonwit building but not the underlying land. For the land, 
they had a lease with twenty-nine years left to run. I agreed to 
buy the building and their land lease for the sum of $25 
million. 

In my mind, that was just a first step. In order to put up the 
building I had in mind, I was going to have to assemble 
several other adjacent pieces—and then seek numerous zoning 
variances. That’s often the situation in New York real estate, 
but in this case I was dealing with an exceptionally 
prestigious, visible site, which meant every move I made was 
going to be unusually difficult, and very carefully scrutinized. 

My most immediate problem was trying to keep the deal 
secret. I was convinced that if anyone got wind of the fact that 
the Bonwit site was up for sale before I signed a contract, I’d 
never make the deal. Once the Bonwit store went on the open 



market, everyone in the world was going to be after it, and the 
asking price would go right through the roof. That’s why, 
after I’d shaken hands with Jack, I said to him, “Listen, I’d 
like to draw up a quick, simple letter of intent that says that 
I’ve agreed to buy the property for $25 million, and you’ve 
agreed to sell it—subject only to the drawing of reasonable 
documents. That way, neither of us can walk away from the 
deal.” To my surprise, Jack said, “Well, that sounds 
reasonable.” Now Jack is a very smart man, but he wasn’t a 
New York guy, and he didn’t realize how hot this property 
was—so valuable that even in the middle of a depression, 
there’d still be people lined up to buy it. 

Jerry and I drew up the letter of intent right then and there. 
Jack read it, and the only change he made was to stick in a 
clause making the sale subject to approval by his board of 
directors. When he handed it back to me, I said to him, “Listen 
Jack, I can’t live with that clause. In three or four weeks, you 
might tell your board of directors not to approve the deal, and 
that would defeat the whole idea of this letter of intent.” Then 
I asked whether he needed approval from the board of 
directors to sell the store. He said he didn’t, and I said, “Let’s 
just take this one clause out.” He gave it a little thought and 
finally he agreed. I left the meeting with a deal—and 
something on paper to confirm it. 

Once I had the letter of intent from Jack Hanigan—but 
before I had a contract—I went to see a man named Conrad 
Stephenson at the Chase Manhattan Bank. My father had 



always done his business with Chase, and so I figured that 
was the best place to go first for the $25 million I needed to 
make the Bonwit purchase. I explained the deal to Connie— 
that I was buying the Bonwit building and their land lease, 
which had twenty-nine years left to run, and that I hoped to 
put up a great skyscraper on the site. Immediately he said, 
“Unless you own the underlying land, that’s not a long 
enough lease to justify financing.” In other words, he was 
reluctant to put up money for me to purchase a site that 
twenty-nine years later—when my lease ran out—could be 
taken over by the owner of the underlying land. But I’d taken 
that into consideration. I said to Connie, “Look, I’ve got two 
alternatives, and I think either one could work.” 

The first one, I told him, was to do a very inexpensive 
conversion into an office building, with retail on the ground 
floor. Because I’d be paying such a low rent through the 
remainder of the lease—$125,000 a year, which was peanuts, 
even then—I was confident I’d be able to pay off my 
mortgage and still make a nice profit over the next thirty 
years. But Connie wasn’t totally convinced, and even I 
considered the first option my worst-case scenario. 

What I really wanted to do, I explained, was to purchase not 
only the building and the lease but also the underlying land. 
Then, I said, I could build a big building without risk of 
losing it at lease expiration. When I told Connie that the owner 
of the underlying land was the Equitable Life Assurance 
Society, he got excited for the first time. That, we both agreed, 



gave me a leg up, since I already had a great relationship with 
Equitable. They’d put up a big percentage of the financing for 
the Hyatt, and by this time the hotel was under construction, 
things were going very well, and everyone was feeling terrific 
about the deal. 

The next thing I did was to set up a date to see George 
Peacock, the head of Equitable Real Estate. It was September 
1978, just a month since I’d first sat down with Jack Hanigan. 
George and I met and I told him I was in the process of 
purchasing the Bonwit lease, for which Equitable owned the 
land, and that I saw a chance to forge a partnership that could 
be very good for both of us. I would contribute my lease, I 
said, if they would contribute their land. Together, as fifty- 
fifty partners, we’d build a great new residential and office 
building on this incredible site. 

Equitable could have chosen simply to hold on to the site 
until the Bonwit lease ran out, and then own it outright. But 
the downside, I pointed out to George, was that then they 
would have to settle for a meager annual rent from a lease 
negotiated long before the value of New York real estate had 
begun to escalate. I also told George that my other option was 
to renovate the existing building and earn a more modest but 
still decent profit over the next thirty years. In truth, I was no 
longer certain that I could get financing for such a deal, but I 
didn’t want him to think that a partnership with Equitable was 
my only option. Then he’d just feel free to drive a much 
harder bargain with me. Fortunately, George took to the idea 



of a partnership almost immediately. He was skeptical that Pd 
get the zoning necessary to build the huge building I had in 
mind, but he’d also seen what I’d achieved with the 
Commodore. By the time I left his office, he’d given me a 
commitment—subject to my delivering on my promises. Once 
again, I found myself juggling provisional commitments. 

My next move was to use my first two commitments—for 
the Bonwit lease and the Equitable land—to try to get a third, 
from Tiffany. Specifically, I wanted to buy the air rights 
above Tiffany, which was directly adjacent to the Bonwit site 
at the corner of 57th and Fifth. By purchasing those rights I’d 
get something called a merged zoning lot, which would allow 
me to build a much larger building. Unfortunately, I didn’t 
know anyone at Tiffany, and the owner, Walter Hoving, was 
known not only as a legandary retailer but also as a difficult, 
demanding, mercurial guy. Even so, I’d always admired 
Hoving, because everything he’d ever touched had turned to 
gold. When he ran Lord and Taylor, it was the best, and when 
he ran Bonwit Teller, it was the best, and so long as he ran 
Tiffany, it was the best. I’d seen him at parties, and he was a 
man with impeccable manners, perfect white hair, beautifully 
tailored suits, and an imperial style. If you were casting a 
movie about the president of Tiffany, Walter Hoving would 
get the part. 

I decided to be very direct. I called Hoving on the phone 
and introduced myself. I was very polite and very respectful, 
and he agreed to see me. By this time Der Scutt had done a 



scale model of the building I hoped to build, as well as one for 
an alternative building, in the event that I didn’t get Tiffany’s 
air rights. I brought both models to the meeting. I said to 
Hoving, “Look, I want to buy your air rights, because that will 
allow me to build a much better building that you yourself will 
like much more. By selling me air rights, you will preserve 
Tiffany forever. No one will ever be able to build over it, and 
therefore no one will ever try to rip it down.” The other reason 
to sell, I told Hoving, was that if I didn’t have his air rights, 
for technical reasons the city would require me to put in lot¬ 
line windows—tiny little windows with wire mesh, which 
would look absolutely horrible, rising up fifty stories directly 
over Tiffany. With his air rights, on the other hand, I’d be 
permitted to put in beautiful picture windows on the side of 
the building overlooking Tiffany. 

At that point I showed Hoving the two models—one a 
magnificent building, which is essentially the design of Trump 
Tower today, the other my hideous alternative. “I’m offering 
you five million dollars,” I said to Walter Hoving, “to let me 
preserve Tiffany. In return you’re selling me something—air 
rights—that you’d never use anyway.” 

Hoving had been at Tiffany almost twenty-five years. He’d 
built it into an incredible success, and naturally he took great 
personal pride in his creation. I was playing to that, and it 
worked. He immediately liked my concept. “Look, young 
man,” he said, “I am going to make a deal with you at the 
price you’ve suggested. I just hope that you do as nice a job as 



you say you will, because I want to be proud of it. In the 
meantime, I have one small problem. I’m going away with my 
wife for a month, and I won’t have time to devote to this until 
I get back.” 

Immediately I started to get nervous. I said, “Gee, Mr. 
Hoving, that’s a big problem, because if I have your air rights, 
I can build a totally different building, and that’s the basis on 
which I’m going to seek my zoning variance. If for some 
reason you change your mind while you’re away, I’ll have 
done a great deal of architectural work and zoning work 
which I’ll just have to throw out.” 

Walter Hoving looked at me as if I’d insulted him. “Young 
man,” he said, “perhaps you didn’t understand. I shook your 
hand. I made a deal with you. That’s that.” I was speechless. 
You have to understand where I was coming from. While 
there are certainly honorable people in the real estate business, 
I was more accustomed to the sort of people with whom you 
don’t want to waste the effort of a handshake because you 
know it’s meaningless. I’m talking about the lowlifes, the 
horror shows with whom nothing counts but a signed 
contract. 

With Walter Hoving, I realized, I was dealing with a totally 
different type—a gentleman who was genuinely shocked at 
any suggestion that he might renege on a deal. He also had a 
way of talking down, so that he actually made me feel a little 
guilty for even suggesting that anything could possibly go 



wrong in our deal. 

As it happened, Walter Hoving went away, and no sooner 
had he left than Philip Morris made a deal to buy the air rights 
over Grand Central at a price far in excess of what I’d agreed 
to pay for the Tiffany air rights, which were in a much better 
location. Then, during that same month, several more air- 
rights deals were made, also for very big numbers. Quite 
simply, New York City was recovering, and the real estate 
market was beginning to go through the roof. I knew Hoving 
was honorable, but I couldn’t help worrying about how he 
was going to feel when he heard about those other deals. 

Several days after he returned, we met to talk over some 
points in our deal. Sure enough, even as we sat down, two of 
his executives began to try to talk him out of making the deal 
by pointing out what had happened in the market. I was upset, 
but I could see very quickly that Hoving was even more upset. 
“Gentlemen,” he said, “I shook hands with this young man 
over a month ago. When I make a deal, that’s the deal, 
whether it’s a good one or a bad one. And I trust I won’t have 
to explain myself again.” That was the end of that. 

Later, I heard that Hoving went even a step further. During 
this same period he’d apparently decided to make another 
deal, much bigger than the one with me: to sell Tiffany to the 
Avon Corporation. I thought Avon was a rather second-rate 
buyer for a classy store like Tiffany. On the other hand, 
they’d offered to pay such an inflated price that I couldn’t 



blame Hoving for agreeing to sell. However, as one of the 
conditions of its purchase, Avon wanted Hoving to agree not 
to go through with the air-rights deal with me. Hoving, I 
heard, stood totally firm. If Avon had a problem with the air- 
rights deal, he told their executives, then they didn’t have to 
buy his store. They dropped the demand and bought the store, 
and my deal went through. 

Walter Hoving was just a totally honorable, totally classy 
man. That’s exactly what made him such a brilliant retailer, 
and it’s why Tiffany has never been the same since he left. I’ll 
give you a small example. Hoving had a policy at Tiffany that 
when his best customers came in, they could pick out what 
they wanted, sign for it, and be billed later. It was very simple 
and very elegant. No sooner did Avon take over than their 
team of accountants started instituting new policies, including 
the introduction of little blue plastic Tiffany credit cards. That 
was fine, except that all of a sudden Tiffany’s best customers 
were told that they, too, had to use the little plastic cards. It 
was not only stupid, it was self-defeating. You want your best 
customers to feel special. 

Before very long, Hoving, who’d agreed at first to stay on 
as a consultant, got fed up and left. That just made things 
worse. As long as Hoving ran Tiffany, for example, you’d 
never see peddlers out front on the street, selling fake watches 
and cheap jewelry, blocking pedestrians, and degrading Fifth 
Avenue. Whenever Walter Hoving saw a peddler, he’d go to 
his people, and he’d start screaming, in his dignified manner, 



“How dare you let them do that?” And within minutes, the 
peddler would be gone. But as soon as Hoving left, a dozen 
street peddlers immediately set up shop in front of Tiffany, 
and they haven’t moved since. However, I learned a lesson 
from Walter Hoving. I now employ some very large security 
people who make absolutely sure that the street in front of 
Trump Tower is kept clean, pristine, and free of peddlers. 

Once I got Tiffany’s air rights, there was just one more 
parcel I needed. Adjacent to Tiffany’s along 57th Street and 
leased by Bonwit was a tiny site, perhaps 4,000 square feet, 
that was critical if I was going to build the building I had in 
mind. Under the zoning regulations, you’re required to have a 
minimum of thirty feet of open space—a rear yard—behind 
any building. Without this last piece, I would have been 
forced to chop the rear yard out of the building we’d already 
designed, and that would have been a disaster. 

The piece I wanted was owned by a man named Leonard 
Kandell. By buying the overall Bonwit lease, I effectively 
controlled the site, but once again, my problem was a short 
lease. It had less than twenty years to run and also included 
provisions that made any zoning changes practically 
impossible. Fortunately, Leonard Kandell, like Hoving, is a 
totally honorable man. Leonard began in real estate by buying 
apartment buildings in the Bronx in the thirties and forties. But 
unlike most small landlords, he decided to get out when he 
saw rent control coming. He sold all his buildings and came to 
Manhattan, where he began buying up leaseholds on prime 



property—meaning the land under buildings. As the market 
rose, Leonard became very rich, and with none of the 
problems of having to run the buildings himself. Meanwhile, 
the landlords who stayed in the Bronx went down the tubes, 
because, sure enough, rent control proved to be a disaster for 
them. 

One reason I’d left Brooklyn and my father’s business was 
to escape rent control, and so from the start Leonard and I had 
an affinity. My problem was that Leonard wasn’t a seller. It 
wasn’t a matter of price, or that he had any particular 
attachment to his 57th Street parcel. It was simply that 
Leonard didn’t sell anything, on the theory that in the long 
run, land prices in Manhattan were headed in only one 
direction and that was up. He was exactly right, of course, and 
though we got along fine, Leonard wouldn’t budge. Then one 
day I discovered an unexpected bonus in my Tiffany deal. I 
was reviewing my air-rights contract when I came across a 
clause that gave Tiffany an option to purchase the adjoining 
Kandell property within a certain time frame. 

I said to myself, Holy Christmas, this could give me a lever 
to make a deal with Leonard. So I went back to Walter, and I 
said, “Listen, you’re never going to buy that Kandell site, so 
would you mind if I also bought your option, as part of my 
deal?” Walter agreed, we put it into my deal, and immediately 
I exercised the option. At first, Leonard took the position that 
I didn’t have the right to exercise the option because it 
belonged to Tiffany and therefore was nontransferable. 



Leonard may have been right but it was also possible, in a 
litigation, that I would win the right to exercise the option. 

When I pointed this out to Leonard, we sat down together, 
and in no more than twenty minutes, we made a deal that was 
good for both of us. I agreed to withdraw my exercise of the 
option, and in return, Leonard agreed to extend my lease on 
the site from twenty years to one hundred years, which was 
long enough to make it financeable. He also rewrote the lease 
to eliminate any prohibitions against rezoning. And while I 
agreed to pay a slightly higher rent, it was still very low for a 
long lease on such a prime site. Leonard and I shook hands, 
and we’ve remained very good friends. 

It’s funny how things turn around. Leonard is an older 
man, and in the past couple of years, he’s begun giving 
thought to his heirs and his estate. Early in 1986, he called and 
said he’d like to make me a gift of a 15 percent interest in the 
land under the Ritz Carlton hotel on Central Park South, 
which is one of his more valuable holdings. In addition, he 
gave me control over the disposition of the land when the 
hotel’s lease comes up in approximately twenty-five years. His 
purpose, Leonard told me, was to put the land in the hands of 
someone he thought would get the most value from it—which 
in turn would benefit his heirs, who retain a majority 
ownership. Leonard is a very generous man and he is also 
very smart. I’ll be fighting like hell for the Kandell family. 

By the time I got the Kandell site on 57th Street, it was 



December 1978, and I was in a delicate situation. Pd pieced 
together everything I needed, I’d managed to keep the deal 
completely secret, but I still had no contract with Genesco. As 
1979 began, my lawyers were still discussing a few final 
points with the Genesco lawyers, and we expected to sign 
contracts no later than February. But in mid-January, word 
finally began to leak out to the real estate community that 
Genesco might be making a deal to sell the Bonwit site. Just as 
I’d predicted, Genesco was immediately besieged with 
interested buyers for the property, among them wealthy Arabs 
with oil-boom money to burn. And sure enough, Genesco 
suddenly began trying to back out of the deal. Even as our 
contract was being prepared, it became clear that if Genesco 
could find a way to break the deal, it would. 

It was then that I thanked my lucky stars I’d gotten that 
one-page letter of intent from Jack Hanigan. Without it, there 
was zero chance my deal would have gone through. I’m not at 
all sure the letter would have proved legally binding, but at the 
very least I could have litigated it and held up any sale of the 
Bonwit property for several years. Naturally, I let Genesco 
know I fully intended to do just that if they reneged on my 
deal. With creditors breathing down their necks, Genesco, I 
knew, didn’t have a lot of time. 

On the morning of January 20 I got a call that proved to be 
a blessing. It was from Dee Wedemeyer, a reporter from the 
New York Times , who wanted to know if it was true that I was 
about to make a deal with Genesco to buy the Bonwit 



building. Genesco, still seeking a way out, had declined to 
give Wedemeyer any comment. But I decided to take a 
calculated risk. I’d tried very hard to keep the deal as secret as 
possible until I had a signed contract, because I didn’t want to 
prompt a bidding war. But now the rumors were circulating, 
and I had a seller who was balking. So I confirmed for 
Wedemeyer that I’d reached an agreement with Genesco for 
the property—and that because I anticipated building a new 
tower on the site, Bonwit would most likely be closed within 
the next several months. 

My idea was to put public pressure on Genesco to live up to 
their agreement. What I didn’t calculate was a secondary 
benefit. No sooner did Wedemeyer’s article appear the next 
morning than all of Bonwit’s best employees began heading 
over to Bergdorf Goodman, Saks Fifth Avenue, and 
Bloomingdale’s to look for new jobs. Suddenly Bonwit began 
losing its best people in droves, and it was becoming almost 
impossible to run the store. That, I believe, was the straw that 
broke Genesco’s back. Suddenly, they stopped balking. Five 
days after the New York Times article appeared, we signed our 
contract. The company’s desperation saved my deal. 

On the other hand, desperation can be a double-edged 
sword. Because Genesco needed cash so badly, and so 
quickly, they insisted on a very unusual contract. In a typical 
real estate deal, you put down a 10 percent deposit when you 
sign a contract, and the remaining 90 percent at closing. 
Instead, Genesco demanded that I put down 50 percent at 



contract—$12.5 million—and the other half at closing. My 
lawyers advised me not to agree to such a demand. The way 
they saw it, there was a reasonable risk that the company 
might go bankrupt before we ever got to closing. If that 
happened, a bankruptcy judge—who has powers you 
wouldn’t believe—might choose to take my deposit and use it 
to pay off other creditors. For me to put so much money at 
such risk, my lawyers said, was totally imprudent. 

I looked at it another way. I wasn’t thrilled about putting 
$12.5 million on the line, but at the same time I believed that 
the more cash I gave Genesco, the more money they’d have to 
pay off debts—and keep their creditors at bay. Also, my 
period of risk would be relatively short, since it was in our 
mutual interest to close the deal as quickly as possible. The 
time between contract and closing is often six months or more. 
In this case, we set it at sixty days. 

In addition, I already had a good deal of time and money 
invested in the deal. As far back as August, following my first 
meeting with Jack Hanigan, I’d begun working on plans for 
the site, and I’d started negotiating with the city for zoning. 
Actually, within minutes of leaving Jack Hanigan’s office, I 
had called Der Scutt and asked him to meet me at the Bonwit 
site. When he got there, I pointed to the building, and I asked 
him what he thought. It was obviously a super location, he 
said, but what did I have in mind for it? 

“I want to build the most fantastic building in New York,” I 



told Der, “and I want you to get working right away, because 
I want to know how big a building I can legally build.” 

From the start, size was a top priority. With such a great 
location, the more apartments I could build, the better the 
return I could hope to get on my investment. Moreover, the 
higher I could go, the better the views—and the more I could 
charge for the apartments. A guy named Arthur Drexler, from 
the Museum of Modern Art, put it very well when he said, 
“Skyscrapers are machines for making money.” Drexler meant 
it as a criticism. I saw it as an incentive. 

From the start, everyone I talked with was skeptical that I 
could get approval to build a huge glass skyscraper along a 
stretch of Fifth Avenue filled with short, old, limestone and 
brick buildings. I’d heard the same thing about the Hyatt, of 
course, and so I didn’t take the warnings too seriously. Even 
putting commercial considerations aside, I felt a tall building 
would be much more striking than a short one. Very quickly, 
Der got caught up in my enthusiasm. When someone 
complained at a community board hearing that the building we 
had in mind was too tall and would block too much light, Der 
answered, only half kidding, “If you want sunlight, move to 
Kansas.” 

For any new building, the permissible height is determined 
by something called Floor Area Ratio (FAR). Specifically, the 
total square footage of a building can be no more than a 
certain multiple of the square footage of the building lot. It 



was possible to get some bonuses, but on this lot, for example, 
the absolute maximum FAR was 21.6. Naturally, that’s what I 
intended to go after. I knew it was going to be an uphill battle. 
When Der did his first computations, using just the Bonwit 
site without Tiffany’s air rights or the Kandell parcel, he 
determined that our maximum FAR was 8.5—which he said 
translated into a twenty-story building with 10,000 square feet 
of usable space per floor. Immediately, I told him to transform 
it into a forty-story building with 5,000 square feet per floor. 
Not only would that give me apartments with better views, it 
would also mean fewer apartments per floor, which is another 
luxury for which buyers will pay a premium. 

Of course I had no intention of settling for a low FAR. For 
starters, my FAR would increase substantially when I acquired 
the Tiffany air rights. In addition, developers can get extra 
FAR by providing certain amenities that the City Planning 
Commission deems desirable. On this site, for example, I 
could get a bonus by building residential units instead of just 
offices, on the theory that office buildings create far more 
pedestrian traffic and congestion. In addition, I could get a 
bonus by building a public area for pedestrians—something 
called a through-block arcade—on my ground floor. I could 
get a third bonus by building more than the minimum retail 
space required by law. And I could get a final bonus by 
building a public park within the shopping area and arcade. 

Eager for every advantage I could get, I began talking to 
Der about designing an atrium with several levels of 



shopping. As a business, a retail atrium seemed a long shot. 
Enclosed shopping malls have been a hit all across the 
country, but they’ve almost never succeeded in New York 
City. The typical suburban mall is clean, controlled, safe, and 
antiseptic, which is exactly why most people feel so 
comfortable in them. New Yorkers, on the other hand, seem to 
thrive on gritty street life and are quite happy to do business 
with street vendors. 

But the way I figured it, even if the atrium wasn’t terribly 
successful, the bonus I’d get for building it—several extra 
floors in my residential tower—would more than make up for 
its cost. It wasn’t until much later, when I began to see how 
magnificently it was turning out, and when we started to 
attract the best stores in the world as tenants, that I realized the 
atrium was going to be something special, a hit on its own 
terms. 

In the early stages, I focused more of my attention on the 
design of the building itself. I wanted to create something 
memorable and monumental, but I also knew that without a 
unique design, we’d never get approval for a very big 
building. The standard four-sided glass box just wasn’t going 
to fly with city planning. Der went to work. He probably did 
three to four dozen drawings, and as we went along, I picked 
the best elements from each one. 

At first, we started out with a glass tower built on a 
rectangular limestone base, but that just didn’t look good. 



Later, we tried a design with three exterior glass elevators. 
That appealed to me, but it turned out that they’d use up far 
too much of our saleable interior space. Finally, Der came up 
with the concept of a series of terraces stepped back from the 
street to the height of the adjacent Tiffany building. My wife, 
Ivan a, and I agreed that the setbacks created a certain 
compatibility and gave our building a less bulky feeling than it 
would have with straight sides, like most skyscrapers have. 
On the higher floors, we settled on a sawtooth design, a zig¬ 
zag effect that gave the building twenty-eight different sides, 
as if you took the steps of a staircase and turned them on their 
side. 

The design was obviously going to be more expensive to 
execute than something more standard, but the advantages 
seemed obvious. With twenty-eight surfaces, we’d be creating 
a striking, distinctive building. Also, the multiple sides would 
ensure at least two views from every room, and in the end, 
that would make it possible to charge more for the apartments. 
To me, we were creating the best of all possible worlds. It was 
a great-looking design, but it was also very saleable. To hit a 
real home run, you need both. 

The next challenge was to have the design approved by the 
city—which meant, among other things, getting zoning 
variances. In one key case, we were able to prevail simply by 
using logic. The zoning law required that we build a ground- 
floor through-block arcade that ran north-south, meaning 
from 57th Street to 56th Street. That would have meant 



putting the entrance to the building on 57th Street, rather than 
on Fifth Avenue, and the latter was obviously more 
prestigious. We simply pointed out to city planning that the 
IBM Building, between our site and Madison Avenue, already 
had a north-south through-block arcade, so that ours would be 
redundant. By running our arcade on a west-east axis, we 
could connect from Fifth Avenue through to IBM’s atrium, 
and therefore all the way out to Madison Avenue. 
Remarkably, everyone agreed that was the best solution. The 
result was that we got the variance that allowed us to create 
our spectacular entrance on Fifth Avenue. 

What the city balked at, from the very start, was the size of 
the building we were proposing—seventy stories high, with 
square footage at the maximum 21.6 FAR. As early as 
December 1978, even before I’d closed my deal with Bonwit, 
city planning let us know that they considered our proposed 
building too big. They said they intended to oppose letting us 
use bonuses to increase our FAR and that they were very 
concerned about the issue of compatibility with the smaller, 
surrounding buildings on Fifth Avenue. 

Fortunately, by the time I closed my deal in early 1979 and 
we entered into serious discussions with city planning, I had 
some ammunition of my own. For starters, I could have 
chosen to build something called an “as of right” building— 
one that doesn’t require any variances. Much the way I’d done 
earlier with Walter Hoving, I had Der prepare a model of the 
“as of right” building to show city planning. It was hideous: a 



thin little four-sided box going straight up eighty stories, 
cantilevering over Tiffany’s. We took the position that if the 
city wouldn’t approve the building we wanted, we were 
prepared to build “as of right”—and we showed them the 
model and the renderings. Naturally, they were horrified. I’m 
not sure they believed we’d ever build it, or even that it was 
buildable, but there was no way they could be sure. 

The next thing I was able to use in my favor—unexpectedly 
—was Bonwit Teller itself. At first, I assumed I’d just tear 
down the store and that would be the end of it. But very 
shortly after I’d signed my deal for the site, another company, 
Allied Stores Corporation, made a deal with Genesco to 
purchase the twelve remaining Bonwit Teller branches in 
locations ranging from Palm Beach, Florida, to Beverly Hills, 
California. Soon after that, the president and CEO of Allied, a 
terrific retailing executive named Thomas Macioce, 
approached me. 

Allied itself had been very close to bankruptcy when 
Macioce took it over in 1966. But over the next ten years, 
he’d transformed it into one of the strongest retailing 
companies in the country. Macioce explained to me that while 
several of the Bonwit stores he’d just purchased were quite 
successful, he felt it was critical to continue to have the 
flagship Bonwit in Manhattan. And ideally, he said, he’d like 
to keep the store at 57th Street and Fifth Avenue, not only 
because it had been there for fifty years, but also because the 
location was unbeatable. 



I told Tom, right off, that there was no way I could give 
Bonwit nearly as much space as it previously had. On the 
other hand, I said, I could give him good space, fronting on 
57th Street, and connected directly through to the atrium I 
intended to build on my ground floor. I showed him my 
plans, and in a very short time, we were able to strike a deal. 

It was very good for Tom, because we signed a long-term 
lease, at a rent-per-square-foot far below what I later got for 
other retail space in the building. But it was also very good for 
me. I leased 55,000 square feet to Allied—giving them a store 
less than one quarter the size of the original Bonwit—for an 
annual rent of $3 million, plus a percentage of their profits. 
T d paid $25 million to purchase Bonwit’s lease and building, 
and with a 10 percent mortgage, my carrying costs were 
approximately $2.5 million a year. In other words, I was 
paying out $2.5 million to own the site, and getting $3 million 
back from Allied for leasing them a small portion of the total 
space. That meant I had a profit of $500,000 a year and 
owned the land for nothing—all guaranteed before I even 
began construction. Better yet, since I was giving the new 
Bonwit only a small portion of my site, I could rent the rest to 
other retailers. 

But perhaps best of all, what I got in Bonwit was a store the 
city very much wanted to keep in New York. I was able to 
make a very simple, very strong case to the people at the City 
Planning Commission. If you want Bonwit to return to Fifth 
Avenue, I told them, you’re going to have to give me my 



zoning. 

Even with that, my approval was far from a sure thing. The 
local community board opposed such a tall building. As a 
ploy, they suggested a six-month moratorium on new 
buildings, to study whether the area was already overbuilt. A 
Committee to Ban the Building Boom sprang up. As soon as 
that happened, politicians had a knee-jerk reaction: they 
latched on to the cause. 

Looking back, I don’t think politics or leverage made a 
critical difference one way or the other. I’m absolutely 
convinced that it was the architecture itself that won us our 
approval. And perhaps no one had a more powerful influence 
than Ada Louise Huxtable, then the chief architecture critic of 
the New York Times. 

I took a calculated risk by inviting Huxtable to look at our 
model and renderings before the City Planning Commission 
voted on our zoning. The power of the New York Times is just 
awesome. It is certainly one of the most influential institutions 
in the world, and I recognized that anything Huxtable wrote 
would have enormous impact. Moreover, I knew that she was 
hostile to skyscrapers in general, and that she almost always 
preferred old and classical to new and glitzy. But by the 
middle of 1979, I was worried about whether I was going to 
get my zoning. I figured that Huxtable couldn’t make things 
worse, and that if I got lucky, she might write something that 
would help. 



In early June, Huxtable came to see our plans. On Sunday, 
July 1, the Times Arts and Leisure section carried her 
“Architecture View” column about Trump Tower. It was titled 
“A New York Blockbuster of Superior Design.” That headline 
probably did more for my zoning than any single thing I ever 
said or did. The funny thing was that Huxtable spent the first 
half of her review complaining that our building was too big 
and suggesting that I had used “every trick in the book to 
maximize its size.” But, interestingly, she didn’t blame me so 
much as she did the city, for zoning laws that she said 
encouraged developers to do what I’d done. And then, at the 
end, she gave us several terrific lines. “A great deal of care has 
been lavished on its design,” she wrote, adding, “It is 
undeniably a dramatically handsome structure.” 

In October, the planning commission unanimously 
approved our zoning. The commission said it would have 
preferred a masonry facade for Trump Tower, as more 
compatible with neighboring buildings, but added that they 
didn’t insist, in light of the fact that I would be providing 
“extraordinary public amenities.” In the end, we negotiated an 
FAR of 21, barely less than the 21.6 maximum. I settled for 
just two fewer floors than I’d originally sought. That gave me 
the equivalent of a sixty-eight-story building, including the 
huge double-ceilinged six-level atrium, which made Trump 
Tower the tallest residential building in the city. At the same 
time, the city took Huxtable’s comments about the zoning 
laws to heart. Responding to the way I’d used bonuses and air 



rights to create a much bigger building, the city amended its 
zoning laws to prevent others from doing the same thing in 
the future. 

Once I had my zoning, the next challenge was getting the 
tower built. It wasn’t going to be cheap. When you build 
above a certain height, construction costs rise almost 
geometrically, simply because it becomes so much more costly 
to do everything, from reinforcing the infrastructure to 
bringing up piping. On the other hand, because I had such a 
prime location, I felt I could afford it. If I did the job right, I’d 
be able to charge such a premium that the extra cost would be 
irrelevant. 

In October 1980, Chase Manhattan agreed to provide 
financing for the construction of Trump Tower. I made a deal 
with HRH Construction to be my general contractor. The 
budget for the whole job—acquisition of the land, 
construction, carrying charges, advertising, and promotion— 
was slightly more than $200 million. The person I hired to be 
my personal representative overseeing the construction, 
Barbara Res, was the first woman ever put in charge of a 
skyscraper in New York. She was thirty-three at the time, 
she’d worked for HRH, and I’d met her on the Commodore 
job, where she’d worked as a mechanical superintendent. I’d 
watched her in construction meetings, and what I liked was 
that she took no guff from anyone. She was half the size of 
most of these bruising guys, but she wasn’t afraid to tell them 
off when she had to, and she knew how to get things done. 



It’s funny. My own mother was a housewife all her life. 
And yet it’s turned out that I’ve hired a lot of women for top 
jobs, and they’ve been among my best people. Often, in fact, 
they are far more effective than the men around them. Louise 
Sunshine, who was an executive vice president in my 
company for ten years, was as relentless a fighter as you’ll 
ever meet. Blanche Sprague, the executive vice president who 
handles all sales and oversees the interior design of my 
buildings, is one of the best salespeople and managers I’ve 
ever met. Norma Foerderer, my executive assistant, is sweet 
and charming and very classy, but she’s steel underneath, and 
people who think she can be pushed around find out very 
quickly that they’re mistaken. Ivan a, my wife, is a great 
manager who treats her employees very well, but she’s also 
very demanding and very competitive. Her employees respect 
her because they know she’s pushing herself as hard as she’s 
pushing them. 

We began demolition of the Bonwit building on March 15, 
1980, and almost immediately I found myself in the middle of 
a major controversy over the two bas-relief Art Deco 
sculptures that were a decorative feature of the exterior of the 
building. All during 1979, long after I’d announced my plans 
and begun negotiating for zoning, no one expressed any 
interest in those friezes. No representative from zoning, from 
landmarks preservation, or from any community arts group 
ever suggested saving them. Finally, in mid-December of 
1979, shortly before I was to begin construction, I got a call 



from someone at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, asking if 
I’d consider donating the friezes, and certain iron grillwork. I 
said that if the friezes could be saved, I’d be happy to donate 
them to the museum. 

What happened was that we began the demolition, and 
when it came time to take down the friezes, my guys came to 
me, and they said, “Mr. Trump, these are a lot heavier than we 
thought, and if you want to try to save them, we’re going to 
have to add special scaffolding for safety’s sake, and it’s 
going to take at least several weeks.” My carrying charges on 
the construction loan for this project were enormous—not to 
mention the extra construction costs of delaying the job. I just 
wasn’t prepared to lose hundreds of thousands of dollars to 
save a few Art Deco sculptures that I believed were worth 
considerably less, and perhaps not very much at all. So I 
ordered my guys to rip them down. 

What I didn’t count on was the outrage this would create. 
The following day, the New York Times ran a front-page 
picture of the workmen demolishing the sculptures, and the 
next thing I knew I’d become a symbol of everything evil 
about modern developers. A Times editorial described the 
demolition as “a memorable version of cash flow calculations 
outweighing public sensibilities” and went on to say that 
“obviously big buildings do not make big human beings, nor 
do big deals make art experts.” 

It was not the sort of publicity you like to get. Looking 



back, I regret that I had the sculptures destroyed. I’m not 
convinced they were truly valuable, and I still think that a lot 
of my critics were phonies and hypocrites, but I understand 
now that certain events can take on a symbolic importance. 
Frankly, I was too young, and perhaps in too much of a 
hurry, to take that into account. The point is that despite what 
some people may think, I’m not looking to be a bad guy when 
it isn’t absolutely necessary. 

Ironically, the whole controversy may have ended up being 
a plus for me in terms of selling Trump Tower. The stories 
that appeared about it invariably started with sentences like: 
“In order to make way for one of the world’s most luxurious 
buildings ...” Even though the publicity was almost entirely 
negative, there was a great deal of it, and that drew a 
tremendous amount of attention to Trump Tower. Almost 
immediately we saw an upsurge in the sales of apartments. I’m 
not saying that’s a good thing, and in truth it probably says 
something perverse about the culture we live in. But I’m a 
businessman, and I learned a lesson from that experience: 
good publicity is preferable to bad, but from a bottom-line 
perspective, bad publicity is sometimes better than no 
publicity at all. Controversy, in short, sells. 

So, it turned out, does glamour. Even before we started 
construction, I’d begun to realize that the atrium could prove 
to be one of the most dazzling parts of Trump Tower. At first 
we just set out to make it an attractive setting for retailers, but 
when I saw the final drawings and the model, I realized it 



could be truly spectacular. I also decided I would spend 
whatever it took to assure that it lived up to its potential. 

Perhaps the best example is the marble. Originally I thought 
of using the brown paradisio that had been so successful for 
the lobby of the Grand Hyatt. But in the end, I became 
convinced that what was great for a hotel lobby wasn’t 
necessarily right for a retail-shopping atrium. Der, Ivana, and 
I looked at hundreds of marble samples. Finally, we came 
upon something called Breccia Perniche, a rare marble in a 
color none of us had ever seen before—an exquisite blend of 
rose, peach, and pink that literally took our breath away. Of 
course it was incredibly expensive—in part because it was a 
very irregular marble. When we went to the quarry, we 
discovered that much of the marble contained large white 
spots and white veins. That was jarring to me and took away 
from the beauty of the stone. So we ended up going to the 
quarry with black tape and marking off the slabs that were the 
best. The rest we just scrapped—maybe 60 percent of the 
total. By the time we were finished, we’d taken the whole top 
of the mountain and used up much of the quarry. Next, I 
made sure to get the finest craftsmen to cut and lay the marble, 
because unless your workmen are the best, you get jagged 
edges, poor matching, and asymmetry, and then you’ve lost 
the whole effect. 

That effect was heightened by the fact that we used so much 
marble—on the floors and for the walls six full floors up. It 
created a very luxurious and a very exciting feeling. 



Invariably, people comment that the atrium—and the color of 
the marble particularly—is friendly and flattering, but also 
vibrant and energizing—all things you want people to feel 
when they shop: comfortable, but also pumped up to spend 
money. 

Of course, the marble was only part of it. The whole atrium 
space was very dramatic and different. Rather than making the 
railings out of aluminum, which is cheap and practical, we 
used polished brass, which was much more expensive but also 
more elegant, and which blended wonderfully with the color 
of the marble. Then we used a lot of reflective glass, 
particularly on the sides of the escalators. That was critical, 
because it made a fairly small core space look far larger and 
more dramatic. The sense of spaciousness was further 
enhanced by the fact that we used only two structural columns 
in the entire atrium. The result is that no matter where you 
stand, you get an unimpeded view and a sense of great 
openness. 

The third element that adds to the drama of the atrium is one 
I actually fought against at first: making the entrance from 
Fifth Avenue unusually large. Zoning regulations required 
only a fifteen-foot width, and I didn’t want to lose any more 
retail space that fronted on Fifth Avenue than I had to. 
However, the city pushed very hard for a thirty-foot width, 
and finally, reluctantly, I went along. It cost me some very 
valuable retail square footage, but now I think that what I got 
instead—a spectacular entrance—was more than worth it. I 



give the City Planning Commission full credit for that. 

The last key element in the atrium was the waterfall that 
runs along the eastern wall. It’s nearly eighty feet high, and it 
cost almost $2 million to build. Most of my people at first 
favored putting paintings on the walls. To me that was old- 
fashioned, unoriginal, and just not very exciting. As it turned 
out, the waterfall proved to be an art form in itself, almost a 
sculptured wall. Also, it attracts far more attention than we’d 
have gotten if we’d put up even some very wonderful art. If 
most malls succeed in part because they’re so safe and 
homogeneous, I’m convinced that the Trump Tower atrium 
succeeds for just the opposite reasons. It’s larger than life, and 
walking through it is a transporting experience, almost as if 
you’re in a wonderland. 

We tried to create a version of that feeling in the apartments 
themselves. The most dramatic element we had to offer, of 
course, was the views. Since the residential units didn’t start 
until the thirtieth level, most were higher than the surrounding 
buildings, which meant they had views to the north of Central 
Park, to the south of the Statue of Liberty, to the east of the 
East River, and to the west of the Hudson. In addition, the 
sawtooth design of the building gave all the major rooms in 
the apartments views in at least two directions. And then, to 
make sure we took the best advantage of those views, we built 
huge windows, virtually from floor to ceiling. I would have 
made the windows all the way from floor to ceiling, but I was 
told that unless there is at least some base below a window, 



some people get vertigo. 

The funny thing is that the inside of the apartments was less 
important than a lot of the other elements. We quickly 
discovered that the sort of buyer who spends $1 million for a 
two-bedroom pied-a-terre, or $5 million for a four-bedroom 
duplex, is going to hire his own designer, gut the apartment, 
and rebuild it to fit his own tastes. 

In the end, the reason that we were able to charge 
unprecedented prices for the apartments was something 
beyond any specific luxuries we provided. It was the fact that 
—through some blend of design, materials, location, 
promotion, luck, and timing—Trump Tower took on a 
mystical aura. A lot of buildings can be successful, but I’m 
convinced that only one, at any given time, can achieve the 
blend of qualities necessary to attract the best buyers and 
command the top prices. 

Before Trump Tower, the last building to achieve that 
mystique had been Olympic Tower, on 51st Street off Fifth 
Avenue, built in the 1970s. The key ingredient was the fact 
that Aristotle Onassis owned it. At the time, Onassis was 
living an amazing life. He was married to Jackie Kennedy and 
was the ultimate jet-setter with mansions around the world, a 
huge yacht, and even his own island, Skorpios. He was very 
rich and very hot, and while Olympic Tower wasn’t a 
particularly exciting or attractive building, it was the right 
product done by the right guy at the right time. It absolutely 



stole the top of the market from another luxury building that 
went up around the same time, the Galleria on East 57th 
Street. 

As it turned out, Trump Tower also stole the market from 
one potentially major competitor. Long before I made my deal 
for the Bonwit site, another developer announced plans to 
build a huge condominium tower above the Museum of 
Modern Art, just off Fifth Avenue at 53rd Street. By all rights 
it should have been a fantastic success. The connection with 
the museum was very prestigious, the location was good, the 
architect, Cesar Pelli, was a big name, and the developer made 
it clear that he would spare no expense to build the best. 

However, Trump Tower far outsold Museum Tower, first 
of all, although we got started later on construction, we began 
selling apartments in Trump Tower around the same time that 
Museum Tower did. From the start, I could see we had some 
advantages. Obviously, we had a better location on Fifth 
Avenue. But in addition, the shape of Museum Tower wasn’t 
inspiring. The facade, with its multicolored glass, wasn’t 
unusually striking, and the lobby was just another lobby. 
Finally, Museum Tower was marketed poorly. Their ads were 
dull, there was no attempt to create excitement, and it came off 
as just an average building. 

By contrast, we took our strengths and promoted them to 
the skies. From day one, we set out to sell Trump Tower not 
just as a beautiful building in a great location but as an event. 



We positioned ourselves as the only place for a certain kind of 
very wealthy person to live—the hottest ticket in town. We 
were selling fantasy. 

The one market we didn’t go after was old-money New 
Yorkers, who generally want to live in older buildings 
anyway. On the other hand, we could appeal to several other 
categories of wealthy people. 

Obviously, we were a natural choice for people connected 
with show business, in the sense that we’d created something 
very glamorous. Foreigners were another big market— 
Europeans, South Americans, Arabs, and Asians. Practically 
speaking, we offered them an immediate advantage. At the 
time we began selling Trump Tower, it was virtually the only 
condominium in New York. To buy an apartment in a 
condominium, all you need is the purchase price. To buy a 
cooperative—which is what most buildings in New York were 
at the time—you need approval from its board of directors, 
who have ridiculous, arbitrary powers, including the right to 
demand all kinds of financial data, social references, and 
personal interviews. Then they can reject you for any reason 
they choose, without explanation. It’s a license to discriminate. 
The worst part is that many people on these co-op boards get 
their kicks from showing off their power. It’s absurd and 
probably illegal, but it happened to be great for Trump Tower. 
Many wealthy foreigners didn’t have the proper social 
references for these cooperatives, or didn’t want to put 
themselves through the scrutiny of a bunch of prying 



strangers. Instead, they came to us. 

I still remember the morning, just before we began selling 
apartments, when one of my salespeople rushed into my 
office. “Mr. Trump,” she said, “we’re in trouble. Museum 
Tower just announced its prices, and they’re much lower than 
ours.” I thought for a minute, and I realized that actually the 
opposite was true: Museum Tower had just done itself 
damage. The sort of wealthy people we were competing for 
don’t look for bargains in apartments. They may want 
bargains in everything else, but when it comes to a home, they 
want the best, not the best buy. By pricing its apartments 
lower than ours, Museum Tower had just announced that it 
was not as good as Trump Tower. 

A lot of people think that we set out to attract celebrities to 
Trump Tower, or that we hired a fancy public relations firm to 
promote the building. The truth is that we never hired anyone 
to do public relations, and every star who bought an apartment 
—Johnny Carson, Steven Spielberg, Paul Anka, Liberace, and 
many others—came to us. Nor did I give any of them special 
deals. Other developers cut prices to attract stars and 
celebrities, but to me that’s a sign of weakness. What really 
means something is when a celebrity is willing to pay full 
price for an apartment. 

If any press story about a celebrity helped promote Trump 
Tower, I suspect it was one about a sale that never actually 
occurred. Shortly after we began selling apartments, I got a 



call from a reporter asking whether or not it was true that 
Prince Charles had purchased an apartment in Trump Tower. 
It so happened that this was the week when Prince Charles and 
Lady Diana had gotten married, and they were, at that 
moment, the most celebrated couple in the world. Our policy 
was not to comment about sales, and that’s what I told this 
reporter, In other words, I refused to confirm or deny the 
rumor. Apparently, the reporter then decided to call 
Buckingham Palace. By this time, the royal couple had left for 
their honeymoon and they were out on the yacht Britannia, so 
the Buckingham Palace spokesman said just what I had: they 
couldn’t confirm or deny the rumor. 

That was all the media needed. In the absence of a denial, 
the story that the royal couple was considering buying an 
apartment in Trump Tower became front-page news all over 
the world. It certainly didn’t hurt us, but I had to laugh to 
myself. Just a month earlier, Prince Charles had come to New 
York for a visit, and the IRA had come out in force to protest. 
As Prince Charles walked into Lincoln Center for a concert 
one evening, hundreds of protestors stood outside, hissing and 
screaming and throwing bottles. It had to be a frightening 
experience for him, and I can’t imagine it left Prince Charles 
with a great desire to take an apartment in New York City. 
Also, while Trump Tower is a great building, I suspect Prince 
Charles would find it very hard to get used to any apartment 
after growing up in Buckingham Palace. 

With so much demand, our marketing strategy was to play 



hard to get. It was a reverse sales technique. If you sit in an 
office with a contract in your hand, eager to make the first 
deal that comes along, it’s quite obvious to people that the 
apartments aren’t in demand. We were never in a rush to sign 
a contract. When people came in, we’d show them the model 
apartments, sit down and talk, and, if they were interested, 
explain that there was a waiting list for the most desirable 
apartments. The more unattainable the apartments seemed, the 
more people wanted them. 

As demand grew, I kept raising the prices—twelve times in 
all. We started out selling for much more than Olympic 
Tower, which until then had been the most expensive building 
in New York. Within a short period, we’d almost doubled the 
price for the best apartments on the highest floors. People 
were buying two-bedroom apartments for $1.5 million, and 
before we finished construction, we’d sold a huge majority of 
the apartments. 

The cycles of buyers at Trump Tower became something of 
a barometer of what was going on in the international 
economy. At first, the big buyers were the Arabs, when oil 
prices were going through the roof. Then, of course, oil prices 
fell and the Arabs went home. In 1981, we got a sudden wave 
of buyers from France. I wasn’t sure why, but then I realized 
the reason was that Francois Mitterrand had been elected 
president, and anyone smart and wealthy realized immediately 
that Mitterrand was going to hurt the French economy. It 
wasn’t just that he was a socialist, and that he began 



nationalizing companies, it was also that he turned out to be a 
dangerous man. What can you say about a guy who goes 
around selling nuclear technology to the highest bidder? It’s 
the lowest anyone can stoop. 

After the European cycle, we got the South Americans and 
the Mexicans, when the dollar was weak and their economies 
still seemed fairly strong. Then, when inflation set in, their 
currencies were devalued, and their governments tried to 
restrict the outflow of cash, that cycle ended. 

During the past several years, we’ve had two new groups 
buying. One is American—specifically, Wall Street types, 
brokers and investment bankers who’ve made instant fortunes 
during the bull market frenzy. It’s ridiculous, when you think 
about it. You get stockbrokers, barely twenty-five years old, 
who suddenly earn $600,000 a year because clients they’ve 
never met call up and say, “I’ll take fifty thousand shares of 
General Motors.” The broker pushes a button on a computer 
and, presto, he’s got a huge commission. As soon as the stock 
market falls out—which it will, because it too runs in cycles— 
most of these guys will be out on the street looking for work. 

The other new buyers are the Japanese. I have great respect 
for what the Japanese have done with their economy, but for 
my money they are often very difficult to do business with. 
For starters, they come in to see you in groups of six or eight 
or even twelve, and so you’ve got to convince all of them to 
make any given deal. You may succeed with one or two or 



three, but it’s far harder to convince all twelve. In addition, 
they rarely smile and they are so serious that they don’t make 
doing business fun. Fortunately, they have a lot of money to 
spend, and they seem to like real estate. What’s unfortunate is 
that for decades now they have become wealthier in large 
measure by screwing the United States with a self-serving 
trade policy that our political leaders have never been able to 
fully understand or counteract. 

Because the 263 apartments in Trump Tower proved to be 
so desirable, I decided to keep a dozen or so off the market, 
much the way a hotel operator always holds a few choice 
rooms free for emergencies. It was a way of keeping options 
open—particularly my own. Originally, I decided to take one 
of the three penthouse triplexes on the top floors—about 
12,000 square feet in all—for my family. We moved in at the 
end of 1983. I had offers as high as $10 million for each of 
the two apartments adjoining mine, but I resisted selling them, 
figuring I might ultimately want more space myself. 

It proved true sooner rather than later. In the middle of 
1985, I got an invitation from Adnan Khashoggi, a Saudi 
Arabian and a billionaire at the time, to come to his apartment 
in Olympic Tower. I went, and while I didn’t particularly go 
for the apartment, I was impressed by the huge size of its 
rooms. Specifically, it had the biggest living room I’d ever 
seen. I had plenty of space in my triplex, but I figured, What 
the hell? Why shouldn’t I have exactly the apartment I wanted 
—particularly when I built the whole building? 



I decided to take over one of the other apartments on the top 
three floors and combine it with mine. It has taken almost two 
years to renovate, but I don’t believe there is any apartment 
anywhere in the world that can touch it. And while I can’t 
honestly say I need an eighty-foot living room, I do get a kick 
out of having one. 

Successful as we were in selling the Trump Tower 
apartments to the top buyers, we did at least as well in 
attracting the best retailers to the atrium. It began when 
Asprey, a London-based store that sells the finest crystal, 
jewelry, and antiques, selected the atrium for its first branch 
store in two hundred years of operation. At first, they took a 
small store in the atrium. Business was so good that they have 
since expanded to a much larger space. Quality, of course, 
attracts more quality. The next thing we knew we had leases 
with many of the world’s top retailers—Asprey, Charles 
Jourdan, Buccellati, Cartier, Martha, Harry Winston, and 
many others. 

It didn’t hurt, of course, that in April 1983, just after the 
atrium opened, we got a good review from Paul Goldberger, 
who by then had replaced Ada Louise Huxtable as architecture 
critic of the Times. The review was headlined ATRIUM IN TRUMP TOWER 
IS A PLEASANT SURPRISE. It began by saying, in effect, that other critics 
had been wrong. The atrium, Goldberger wrote, “is turning 
out to be a much more pleasant addition to the cityscape than 
the architectural oddsmakers would have had it.” The review 
went on to say that the atrium “may well be the most pleasant 



interior public space to be completed in New York in some 
years. It is warm, luxurious and even exhilarating—in every 
way more welcoming than the public arcades and atriums that 
have preceded it in buildings like Olympic Tower, the 
Galleria, and Citicorp Center.” 

That review had two positive effects. First, it reinforced the 
feeling among the retailers in the atrium and the people who’d 
purchased apartments in Trump Tower that they’d made the 
best choice. But second, and more important, it helped bring 
more shoppers to the atrium. They, of course, were ultimately 
the key to its success. 

The odd thing is that no one could ever quite believe that 
the atrium was a commercial success. From the day it opened, 
false rumors circulated. One was that while it was obviously a 
tourist attraction, no one really bought anything there. 
Another was that the European retailers stayed only because 
their stores functioned as high-visibility loss-leaders. Still 
other stories had it that the stores on the ground floor did well, 
but those on the upper floors did not. As late as 1986, a New 
York Times reporter came to see me, obviously prepared to do 
a hatchet job on the atrium. Instead, he did his reporting and 
ended up writing a front-page business-section story about the 
atrium’s extraordinary success. 

Typically, a suburban mall has a turnover of at least a third 
of its original tenants during the first several years. Trump 
Tower lost only a handful of its stores during the first three 



years. More important, no sooner does a tenant leave than he 
is replaced by one of the fifty retailers we have on our waiting 
list. Stores with the most expensive merchandise in the world 
have prospered in the atrium. 

Not every quality retailer has found the location 
appropriate, of course. The best example is the experience of 
Loewe, the leather-goods retailer, which was among the 
atrium’s first tenants. Loewe had beautiful merchandise. But it 
turned out that while a wealthy woman might pay thousands 
of dollars for a piece of jewelry or an evening gown at a shop 
next door, she was not willing to shell out $3,000 for a pair of 
Loewe’s leather pants, no matter how soft and buttery they 
might feel. So Loewe’s didn’t do well. But in the end, 
everyone came out okay. Asprey, which was doing very well 
next door, took over Loewe’s space. Loewe, therefore, got out 
of a long-term lease, Asprey got an additional 4,600 square 
feet it very much wanted, and I got a great new lease. 

One last element helped make the Trump Tower deal a huge 
home run, and that was something called a 421-A tax 
exemption. Ironically, getting my 421-A ended up taking me 
longer than it had to assemble the site and complete the entire 
construction of Trump Tower. 

The city enacted the 421-A law in 1971, to encourage 
residential development. In return for improving a site, 
developers were entitled to an exemption from real estate taxes 
over a ten-year period. Every two years the exemption 



decreased by 20 percent. Everyone who applied for the 421-A 
exemption got it, almost as a matter of course. Then I came 
along with Trump Tower. 

There was no question that I was entitled. I was proposing 
to take a ten-story building in a state of disrepair and to build 
in its place a multiuse sixty-eight story $200 million tower. 
Unlike the tax abatement I’d gotten on the Grand Hyatt, where 
I was forgiven all taxes, the 421-A program wouldn’t exempt 
me from taxes currently being paid on the site—but it would 
exempt me from additional taxes attributable to an increased 
assessed value on the site. Who could argue that I wouldn’t be 
improving and better utilizing the site with Trump Tower? 

Ed Koch could, for one. And the reason had nothing to do 
with the merits of my case. It was all politics. Koch and his 
deputies sensed an opportunity they couldn’t resist: to position 
themselves as consumer advocates taking on a greedy 
developer. From a public relations perspective, I was 
vulnerable. It was quite obvious that Fifth Avenue wasn’t 
exactly a marginal neighborhood, and that I’d probably 
succeed with Trump Tower even if I didn’t get a tax 
exemption. 

But in my mind, none of that had any bearing on my legal 
right to a 421-A exemption. In December 1980, I applied for 
a 421-A for the first time. A month later, I met with Tony 
Gliedman, commissioner of the city’s Department of Housing, 
Preservation and Development, to make my case in person. In 



March, Gliedman and the HPD turned my application down. 

I called Koch and told him I thought the ruling was unfair, 
that I wasn’t about to give up, and that the city was going to 
waste a huge amount of money litigating a case I’d eventually 
win. 

In April 1981, I filed something called an Article 78 
proceeding in state supreme court, seeking to have the city’s 
ruling overturned. The court found in my favor, but an 
appellate court reversed the ruling, so I took my case to the 
state’s highest court, the court of appeals. In December 1982 
—nearly two years after my original application—the court of 
appeals ruled 7-0 that the city had improperly refused me an 
exemption. But instead of simply ordering the city to expedite 
my exemption, the court told the city to reconsider my 
request. They did—and turned me down again. 

By now I was so outraged that the cost of the litigation was 
beside the point. We refiled an Article 78, and exactly the 
same scenario unfolded. We won in supreme court, got 
overturned at the appellate level, and ended up again before 
the court of appeals. My lawyer, Roy Cohn, did a brilliant job, 
arguing before seven justices without so much as a note. This 
time, the court again ruled unanimously that we were entitled 
to our exemption—and ordered the city to provide it without 
further delay. 

That was just the icing on the cake. By this time, Trump 
Tower was an unqualified success. It had given me visibility 



and credibility and prestige. It was also a great success 
financially. The way I figure it, the entire project—including 
land, construction costs, architecture fees, advertising and 
promotion, and finance charges—cost approximately $190 
million. The sales of apartments have so far generated $240 
million—meaning that even before including revenues from 
the stores and offices, we have earned a profit of 
approximately $50 million on Trump Tower. I also earned 
more than $10 million in commissions as a sales agent for 
apartments in Trump Tower. Finally, the rent from office 
space and the retail atrium generates many millions more a 
year—almost all of it profit. 

Ultimately, Trump Tower became much more than just 
another good deal. I work in it, I live in it, and I have a very 
special feeling about it. And it’s because I have such a 
personal attachment that I ended up buying out my partner, 
Equitable, in 1986. What happened is that Equitable put a new 
guy in charge of its New York real estate operation. One day 
this fellow called me up and said, “Mr. Trump, I’ve just been 
looking over the books, and I’d like you to explain why we’re 
spending so much on the maintenance of Trump Tower.” We 
were, in fact, spending nearly $1 million a year, which is 
almost unheard of. But the explanation was very simple. 
When you set the highest possible standards, they’re 
expensive to maintain. As one simple example, my policy was 
to have all of the brass in the atrium polished twice a month. 
Why, this fellow asked, couldn’t we save some money by 



polishing once every couple of months? 

At first I was civil. I tried to explain that one of the key 
reasons for the success of the atrium is that it was so 
impeccably well-run. I also said I had no intention of 
changing our policy, and I suggested to this executive that 
perhaps he ought to take a day to think about whether he 
really wanted to push it. He called me back twenty-four hours 
later, and he said he’d thought about it and he did want to go 
ahead with cutbacks. That was probably the end of my 
partnership with Equitable. Much as I liked Equitable, I wasn’t 
about to tamper with something so successful just to save a 
few bucks. To do that would have been totally self- 
destructive. 

I was upset, but I was also philosophical. I went to my 
friend George Peacock, the head of real estate at Equitable, 
and I explained that we had a problem, and that there didn’t 
seem to be a way out of it. Therefore, I wanted to buy out 
Equitable’s share. In a short time we made a deal, and I now 
own Trump Tower outright. After we’d signed the contracts, I 
got a letter from George Peacock, who ended by saying, “As 
with most things in life, time calls for change and it is best to 
accept that fact. Nevertheless, I shah always be proud of my 
involvement in the creation of Trump Tower and fondly 
remember how we worked to bring it about.” 

I was very happy to get that letter. It was a classy way to 
conclude a partnership that had been a class act from the start. 



My father, Fred Trump, in a recent photograph. 



With my sisters and brothers in 1951. Left to right: me, 
Freddy, Robert, Maryanne, and Elizabeth. 


HENRY KERN PHOTOGRAPHERS 



At age twelve, inspecting the foundation for a six-story 
building in Queens, New York. 


FREDERICK SCHROEDER 


At the New York Military Academy, May 1963. 


DON DONATO 



With my parents on the New York Military Academy 

grounds, spring, 1964. 

DON DONATO 



Graduation photo, June 1964. 


DON DONATO 





Leading the New York Military Academy contingent up Fifth 
Avenue during the Columbus Day parade, October 1963. This 
was my first real glimpse of prime Fifth Avenue property. 

DON DONATO 



Ivana as a top fashion model in Montreal, Canada, 1975. 



With Ivana on our honeymoon in Acapulco, 1977 



In 1975, at age twenty-nine, proposing a convention center 
for New York City on the 34th Street railyards, for which I 
held an option. Success arrived in 1978, when the city and 
state chose my site over others that had been considered. 

Marianne pernold 



Explaining to reporters why my site—the 34th Street railyards 
—was the best location for New York City’s convention 

center, June 1976. BILL MARK 



With architects Jordan Gruzen and Der Scutt, answering 
questions about the convention center at Hilton Hotel press 
conference, June 1976. BILL MARK 



Standing on beautiful clean newly made ice—the first in six 
years—after successfully turning around the city’s stalled 
reconstruction of the Wollman Rink in Central Park, October 

1986. 


TED THAI/TIME MAGAZINE 


Ribbon-cutting at the reopening of the Wollman Rink, 
November 13, 1986. Left to right: Toller Cranston, Michael 
Seibert, Judy Blumberg, Debbi Thomas, Dorothy Hamill, 
Scott Hamilton, Borough President David Dinkins, Robert 
Douglas of the Chase Manhattan Bank, me, Commissioner 
Henry Stern, Mayor Koch, Aja Zanova-Steindler, Dick 
Button, Jayne Torvil, Christopher Dean, Robin Cousins, 

Peggy Fleming. 


Burning the mortgage after having raised more than $100,000 
to save Mrs. Annabel Hill’s Georgia farm from foreclosure, 

December 23, 1986. 



With Bob Hope and Ivana, October 1986. 




In the vanguard of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial ticker-tape 
parade up Broadway, May 1985. I feel strongly about 
supporting veterans and was proud to help underwrite both 
the parade and the Vietnam Veterans Memorial constructed in 

downtown Manhattan. 


©1985 CHASE ROE 




Signing running back Herschel Walker to play for the New 
Jersey Generals, September 23, 1983. 


At the Human Resources Center Twentieth Anniversary 
Celebrity Sports Night, May 29, 1986. 



With Mayor Ed Koch and my father, Ivana, and my mother, 

Mary Trump, at City Hall. 


HOLLAND WEMPLE 



Fifth Avenue ticker-tape parade that I put together to honor 
Dennis Conner and the crew of the yacht Stars and Stripes for 
recapturing the coveted America’s Cup and bringing it home 
from Australia. The parade brought over 500,000 New 
Yorkers out to cheer the victorious crew on a bitter cold day 

in February 1987. 



With friend and partner Lee Iacocca at a recent reception. 



Shooting a scene with Valerie Bertinelli for CBS’s highly 
successful miniseries I’ll Take Manhattan, July 1986. 

BOB GREENE/CBS PHOTO 

Being greeted by President and Mrs. Reagan, 1986. 


OFFICIAL WHITE HOUSE PHOTOGRAPH 




TcQaiMlbay 
'Wh hat wishes, 





New York City’s Jacob Javits Convention Center constructed 
at the West 34th Street railyards. I offered to oversee the 



construction, but the city and state went ahead on their own. 
Not surprisingly, the project came in years late and hundreds 
of millions of dollars over budget. 



With the St. Moritz on one side of the avenue and Trump Parc 
on the other, the Trump Organization now controls twin 
towers flanking the Avenue of the Americas at Central Park 

South. 


Model of Trump Plaza, a 175-unit residential tower located 
near Bloomingdale’s at 61st Street and Third Avenue on New 

York’s Upper East Side. 


BAEHR 







Model of Trump Parc, generally considered the highest- 
priced, fastest-selling condominium in New York, containing 
luxurious apartments with vast terraces and all-marble baths. 
Adjacent to Trump Parc is 100 Central Park South, an elegant 
prewar building comprising 80 rental apartment units. 


©WOLFGANG HOYT/ESTO 


















Model of the Grand Hyatt Hotel. This 34-story, 1,406-room 
luxury convention hotel is a $100 million development located 
on 42nd Street between Lexington and Park avenues, adjacent 

to Grand Central Station. 


COPYRIGHT 1978, GRUZEN & PARTNERS ARCHITECTS, DER SCUTT, CONSULTING ARCHITECT 


Grand Central Terminal restoration we carried out in 1979 
during the construction of the adjoining Grand Hyatt Hotel. 










Model of Trump Tower, flagship of the Trump Organization, 
located on Fifth Avenue and 56th Street adjacent to Tiffany. 
The 68-story building contains some of the most exclusive 
residential, retail, and office space in New York, and its 6- 
story pink marble atrium (inset above) with an 80-foot 
waterfall has made it a New York City landmark. 





©KAY CHERNUSH/THE IMAGE BANK 



Model of Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino on the Boardwalk, 
Atlantic City’s tallest hotel and one of the most successful 

hotel-casinos anywhere. 

BAEHR 



October 23, 1986, the luckiest day of my life. During 
construction of a 2,700-car garage at the Trump Plaza Hotel 
and Casino in Atlantic City, the boom of a huge crane reached 
out too far to pick up a 22-ton beam; the crane toppled over, 
and a large section of the garage collapsed. Minutes before the 








accident, at least a hundred workers were on the site. The crew 
had just left for a coffee break, and no one was hurt. 




A model of the $320 million Trump’s Castle Hotel and Casino 
located at the Marina in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Under 
construction at this massive development is a major new tower 
containing a ballroom and super-luxury suites, and a 
spectacular 600-slip marina complex. 



My controlling interest in Resorts International includes the 
Taj Mahal in Atlantic City, scheduled for completion in 
September 1988, which will be the largest hotel-casino 
anywhere in the world, with a casino floor of approximately 





120,000 square feet. 



Mar-a-Lago, our winter home in Palm Beach, Florida, was 
designed by Joseph Urban in the mid-twenties for Marjorie 
Merriweather Post, the Post cereal heiress. This magnificent 
118-room home sits on property that stretches from the 
Atlantic Ocean on the east to Lake Worth on the west and 
comprises 20 acres of perfectly landscaped lawns, a 9-hole 
golf course, citrus groves, a greenhouse and cutting garden, 
guest houses, staff quarters, tennis courts, and a swimming 
pool. It is considered one of the most valuable parcels of land 

in the United States. 




Trump Plaza of the Palm Beaches, a 260-unit deluxe 
condominium on the Intercoastal Waterway in Florida, with 
spectacular views of Lake Worth and the Atlantic Ocean. 



Displaying one of the early conceptual designs of Television 

City. 


©1987 THOMAS VICTOR 


West Side railyards, the largest undeveloped waterfront tract 
in Manhattan, encompassing approximately 100 acres and 
stretching from West 59th Street to West 72nd Street along the 
Hudson River—the projected site for Television City. On this 
site will be both the world’s tallest building and the most 
advanced television production complex, approximately 8,000 
residential units, a major retail concourse, and more than 13 
acres of beautifully landscaped recreational space, including a 

waterfront promenade. COPYRIGHT SKYVIEWS SURVEY INC. 



8 

GAMING 


The Building on the Boardwalk 


T he first time the economics of the casino gaming business 
really came home to me was one day late in 1975. I was 
driving along in my car, to yet another meeting about 
the Commodore Hotel deal, when a news report came on the 
radio. Hotel employees in Las Vegas, Nevada, the announcer 
reported, had just voted to strike. Among other consequences, 
the stock price of Hilton Hotels, which owned two casinos in 
Las Vegas, had dropped tremendously. By this time I knew 
something about the hotel business, but I was still stunned. 
How was it possible that the stock of a company that owned at 
least a hundred hotels worldwide could be hurt so badly by a 
strike against just two of them? 

When I got back to my office, it took only a small amount 
of research to find out the answer. Hilton, it turned out, owned 
more than 150 hotels worldwide, but its two casino hotels in 
Las Vegas accounted for nearly 40 percent of the company’s 
net profits. By comparison, a hotel such as the New York 
Hilton—one of the biggest in Manhattan and one I’d always 




assumed was a huge success—accounted for less than 1 
percent of overall Hilton profits. It was a sobering thought. 
For nearly two years, I’d been working day and night to try to 
build my own huge hotel on 42nd Street. I wasn’t getting my 
approvals, I wasn’t getting my financing, and it seemed highly 
likely that the whole deal was going to fall through. Now, for 
the first time, it occurred to me that even if I finally got the 
hotel built and it became a major success in the greatest city in 
the world, it still wouldn’t be nearly as profitable as a 
moderately successful casino hotel in a small desert town in 
the Southwest. 

By this point I had invested a great deal of time in the 
Commodore deal, and I tend not to give up on something I’ve 
started. But what I did, shortly after I heard that radio report, 
was take a trip down to Atlantic City. A year earlier, a 
referendum to legalize gambling throughout the state of New 
Jersey had been badly defeated. Now a new initiative was on 
the 1976 ballot, to legalize gambling solely in Atlantic City. 

It certainly seemed worth checking out. I’ve never had any 
great moral problems with gambling because most of the 
objections seem hypocritical to me. The New York Stock 
Exchange happens to be the biggest casino in the world. The 
only thing that makes it different from the average casino is 
that the players dress in blue pinstripe suits and carry leather 
briefcases. If you allow people to gamble in the stock market, 
where more money is made and lost than in all the casinos of 
the world put together, I see nothing terribly different about 



permitting people to bet on blackjack or craps or roulette. 

To me, the key questions about legalizing gambling in 
Atlantic City were economic. Was the timing right, was the 
price of entry reasonable, and did the area make sense as a 
location? Atlantic City is 120 miles from New York City on 
the south shore of New Jersey, and once upon a time it was a 
great resort and convention center. But when the convention 
business shifted to bigger cities in warmer climates, Atlantic 
City fell on hard times. I wasn’t prepared for how badly 
things had deteriorated. It seemed almost like a ghost town, 
with burned-out buildings, boarded-up stores, and the feeling 
of despair you sense immediately in places where a lot of 
people are out of work. 

Ironically, the prospect of legalized gambling had already 
sent Atlantic City land values soaring, particularly along the 
Boardwalk by the ocean, Speculators—everyone from large 
public companies to fly-by-night con men—had moved in like 
vultures. Families living in tiny homes that they couldn’t have 
sold a year earlier for $5,000 Suddenly found themselves 
being offered $300,000, $500,000, and even $1 million. 

It was a little ridiculous, and I decided not to be one of the 
speculators. I didn’t like the idea of putting up a lot of pure 
risk money. Say, for example, I paid $500,000 to buy a piece 
of property before the referendum. If it failed, my $500,000 
investment would drop in value to almost nothing the next 
day. If the referendum passed, that same piece of land might 



cost me $2 million, but I thought it was a better bet to pay 
more for a sure thing. The economics of a successful casino 
operation are so strong that paying a little more for a good site 
would eventually prove to be a small expense. 

Sure enough, the referendum passed in November 1976 
and was signed into law by the middle of 1977. By then, 
however, the Grand Hyatt project was finally moving forward 
and the price of land in Atlantic City had become more 
astronomical than I had anticipated. Just as I’d done five years 
earlier in Manhattan when prices seemed too high, I decided to 
stay on the sidelines a little longer. I knew that if I was patient 
and kept my eyes open, a better opportunity would eventually 
arise. 

Nearly three years passed, but finally, in the winter of 1980, 
I got a call from an architect I had looking out for me in 
Atlantic City. He told me that a certain prime piece of 
Boardwalk property I’d always been interested in might be 
available. The timing couldn’t have been better. For one thing, 
the first wave of euphoria about the casino business had 
passed, and times were tougher. A few casinos—Resorts, 
Golden Nugget, Caesars—were doing terrific business, but the 
more recent ventures had run into all kinds of problems. 

Bally, the newest casino in town, had come in at least $200 
million over budget. The Tropicana facility, owned by 
Ramada Inn, was experiencing severe construction delays and 
enormous overruns. Bob Guccione of Penthouse had 



announced plans to build a Boardwalk casino, only to find 
after acquiring a site that he couldn’t get financing. Hugh 
Hefner’s plans for a Playboy hotel-casino fell apart after he 
was turned down for a license by the Casino Control 
Commission. A half dozen lesser-known players had come 
riding into town with great plans, only to be derailed by 
trouble with financing and licensing, or intimidated by the 
huge cost of building a hotel-casino. 

Atlantic City’s reputation had also been hurt by corruption 
charges growing out of the FBI’s Abscam sting operation. In 
1980, the vice-chairman of the Casino Control Commission, 
Kenneth MacDonald, resigned after admitting that he’d been 
in the room when a $100,000 bribe was passed to a local 
politician by potential investors looking for help in getting a 
casino license. To make matters still worse, the winter of 1980 
had been particularly harsh—freezing cold and so windy that 
in January and February you could barely stand up on the 
Boardwalk. 

Suddenly, a city that had been very hot for several years 
turned very cold, literally and figuratively. No one was talking 
about building any more new casinos. It seemed possible that 
the gaming business in Atlantic City was going to prove to be 
seasonal at best—enough to sustain only a few casinos. In my 
view, however, that translated into an opportunity. The worst 
of times often create the best opportunities to make good 
deals. 



The two-and-a-half-acre piece of property that I got the call 
about was at the center of the Boardwalk, just off the main 
road leading into town from the Atlantic City Expressway. In 
addition, the site was directly alongside the convention center, 
the largest space available for conventions and major 
entertainment—and a potential funnel into any casino built 
next door. I was convinced that there was no better casino site 
in town. Perhaps not coincidentally, it had already proved to 
be one of the most difficult to assemble. 

By 1980, everyone and his uncle had tried, and the result 
was a legal mess—fragmented ownership, overlapping 
agreements, disputes over options, liens on individual parcels, 
and warring factions. The status of the site seemed almost 
impossible to comprehend, much less to untangle. Every 
lawyer and real estate broker I spoke with told me flat out that 
if I really wanted to build a casino in Atlantic City, I’d be far 
better off purchasing a site that was already assembled. I 
listened to the advice, but I wasn’t convinced. 

First of all, I always believe in going after the best location, 
if you can get it at a reasonable price. Secondly, I have an 
almost perverse attraction to complicated deals, partly because 
they tend to be more interesting, but also because it is more 
likely you can get a good price on a difficult deal. 

Had I tried to assemble the same site back in 1976, the story 
probably would have been very different. At that point, I had 
yet to build anything in New York, and no one really knew 



who I was. But by 1980, with the Hyatt under construction, 
and the Trump Tower project announced, I had a much higher 
profile and a lot more credibility. When you’re negotiating 
with people who’ve been promised the world a half dozen 
times and gotten nothing, credibility is critical. 

The site consisted of three large parcels, each one owned by 
a different investment group, as well as a half dozen small 
homes owned by individual immigrant families. The key to 
putting the deal together was making every parcel in the deal 
contingent on my getting all of the others. The only chance of 
building the great facility I envisioned was to put together the 
whole site. The last thing I wanted to do was invest a lot of 
money and then find myself squeezed at the end by one 
holdout owner who understood the value of controlling the 
final piece in a puzzle. 

That’s what happened to Bob Guccione, on the site next 
door. To this day, underneath the rusting frame of an 
unfinished building there remains a single-family home that 
Guccione never managed to purchase. Even if he’d gotten 
financing, he would have had a problem. Imagine spending 
$300 million or $400 million on a gleaming, glamorous new 
facility—but building it around a rotting five-room shack. 

Instead, I set out to leverage my credibility. I told the 
owners of the sites that I was prepared to make a fair deal, and 
that unlike all the others before me, I was going to follow 
through. I pointed out that I had a strong track record when it 



came to developing property. I also suggested that I might be 
the only person around who still had the inclination to put this 
deal together at all. If they couldn’t come to an agreement with 
me, I said, they might be sitting on their property for many 
years to come. 

The major part of the deal was for the three large parcels on 
the site. The groups that owned them were known as SSG, 
Magnum, and Network III, and I negotiated with the 
principals of each group myself. Rather than trying to 
purchase the pieces outright, I sought very long leases with 
options to purchase at a later date. My strategy was to keep my 
up-front investment down, and also to avoid seeking major 
financing at a time when banks were wary about Atlantic City. 
In the case of leases, I could carry the costs myself. My pitch 
was very simple: I was prepared to buy them out, quickly and 
cleanly. They, in turn, had to cooperate with me and with each 
other, so that all closings could be simultaneous. They also 
had to drop the lawsuits they were waging against each other 
over prior attempts to jointly sell or lease the land. I did not 
want to get involved, down the road, in a legal morass. 

The properties I bought outright were the individual homes. 
I hired local people to negotiate on my behalf, because many 
of those we were negotiating with were immigrants who 
spoke very limited English and weren’t used to dealing with 
outsiders. Other developers had paid up to $1 million for tiny 
plots in strategic locations. Because times had turned bad, I 
was able to purchase nearly all of the houses at much more 



modest prices. 

By July 1980, we had all the pieces in place. I remember 
closing day very well. We had arranged simultaneous 
closings, beginning on a Friday afternoon, in the offices of 
one of our attorneys in Atlantic City. The closings went on 
around the clock—it took twenty-eight hours before 
everything was signed and sealed. At that point, we had a 
roomful of people almost delirious from exhaustion—but I 
controlled the best site in Atlantic City. 

Before I could move forward, I still had to get financing, 
architectural approvals, and licensing as a casino operator. 
More important, I had to decide whether the timing was right 
to undertake this huge project. Fortunately, I didn’t feel 
pressed to make any quick decisions. It was true that I had 
several million dollars invested—including lawyers’ fees, 
preliminary architectural drawings, staff costs, and purchase 
and lease of land. But I was very confident that if I wanted to 
turn around and sell my assembled site to someone else, I’d 
get a great deal more for it than I’d put in. There are always 
buyers for the best. 

In the meantime, my first priority was to get licensed by the 
Casino Control Commission. I’d followed Atlantic City 
closely enough to know that the licensing process could be 
very long, very difficult, and very unpredictable. 

Playboy and Hugh Hefner, for example, were turned down 
for a license because the company had allegedly paid a bribe 



twenty years earlier in order to get a liquor license for the 
Playboy Club in Manhattan. When Hefner testified in New 
Jersey, he took the position that he’d actually been shaken 
down for a payment, and that neither he nor Playboy had ever 
been charged with a crime. Even so, his license was denied. 
The state official who cross-examined Heftier said afterward 
that several commissioners hadn’t liked Hefner’s demeanor 
and style on the witness stand. I don’t believe he helped his 
cause when he walked into the hearing in Trenton, New 
Jersey, with blazing pipe, silk suit and shirt, and a blond 
bombshell at his side. The licensing process is very subjective; 
if his savvy daughter, Christie, had been involved at the time, 
perhaps the outcome would have been different. 

Much more serious allegations of connections with 
organized crime had been raised against several other 
applicants. Caesars and Bally were among them, but 
nonetheless, they both eventually got licensed. What became 
clear to me, as I watched the licensing process, was a pattern 
of something I call bloodletting: in exchange for a license, 
applicants were regularly being forced to offer up at least one 
sacrificial lamb. At Caesars World, it was the Perlman 
brothers, who had to resign from the company, and at Bally it 
was William O’Donnell. But unlike a large public company, I 
couldn’t afford to sacrifice anyone. I had to demonstrate an 
absolutely unblemished background. 

The first thing I did was hire a lawyer to represent me. Nick 
Rib is was originally recommended by the Newhouse family, 



for whom he’d done a lot of work. I have great respect for the 
Newhouses, and when I met Nick, I liked his style. He was 
probably thirty at the time, but he looked years younger. The 
first thing I said to Nick was “Look, I’m just not sure a lawyer 
as young as you are can handle a big project like this.” Nick 
wasn’t thrown. “To tell you the truth, Mr. Trump,” he said, 
“I’ve never had a client as young as you who could afford my 
bill.” 

Nick and I agreed immediately on a strategy. I’d hold back 
on any construction until we got a decision on licensing. 

In every previous situation, companies who purchased or 
assembled sites in Atlantic City had begun the licensing 
process and construction concurrently. Licensing could take as 
long as construction, and the sooner the casino got built, the 
faster it could start earning money. It’s perfectly logical—so 
long as your licensing comes through in the end. But unlike 
these other companies, I didn’t want to put several hundred 
million dollars at risk in the meantime. Also, I didn’t want to 
be in a weak negotiating position with the Casino Control 
Commission. Once you’ve begun investing huge sums of 
money, it’s very hard to say no to anything they ask for. 
Waiting to get a decision on licensing meant paying carrying 
costs on my land a little longer, and postponing profits, but it 
seemed more than worth it. To this day not many people or 
companies are willing to go through the nightmare of 
licensing in New Jersey, which gives Nevada a big advantage 
in attracting new investors. 



My strongest card was the fact that construction of new 
casinos in Atlantic City had come to a complete standstill. 
State and city officials, I knew, were hungry for new evidence 
that Atlantic City was still a good investment. Because my 
credibility as a major builder had been established, I was 
confident that state and local officials would be receptive to 
my constructing a major casino-hotel in Atlantic City. I didn’t 
want to be in the position of pleading with anyone. At the 
very least, I wanted to deal as one among equals, all with an 
interest in making the project work. 

By this time, I’d brought my brother Robert aboard to work 
with me on the project. Unlike me, Robert decided after 
graduating from college to work on Wall Street—perhaps as a 
way of getting out from under the family shadow. He started 
in corporate finance at Kidder Peabody. Three years later, he 
moved to Eastdil Realty, and for the next five years did 
corporate real estate finance work. Finally he moved to 
Shearson Loeb Rhodes, where he set up a real estate finance 
group and ran it very successfully, until he joined me. I think 
both of us always assumed that eventually he’d come back to 
the family business. 

Atlantic City was the perfect opportunity. I was looking at a 
potential investment of $200 million, in a town 120 miles 
from New York City, where I couldn’t possibly be hands-on 
every day. What I needed was someone totally competent, 
totally honest, and totally loyal to oversee the project. There is 
nothing to compare with family if they happen to be 



competent, because you can trust family in a way you can 
never trust anyone else. I called Robert one evening in May 
1980, we talked for several hours in my apartment, and by the 
next day, he’d agreed to take over day-to-day responsibility 
for Atlantic City. Among other things, that meant we’d both 
go for licensing. 

On a February morning in 1981, Robert, Nick Rib is, and I 
drove to New Jersey for a meeting with the attorney general of 
New Jersey and the head of gaming enforcement. I was very 
respectful, but I was also very blunt. I said that I was prepared 
to make a major investment in New Jersey—my own money, 
not corporate money—and that I’d already invested several 
million dollars on my Boardwalk site. What concerned me, I 
said, was that New Jersey had acquired a reputation for 
making it very difficult for any developer to do business in the 
gaming area. Licensing investigations had dragged on for 
eighteen months and more. Much as I wanted to build a great 
casino on the great site I’d assembled, I said, I had a very 
successful real estate business in New York and I was more 
than willing to walk away from Atlantic City if the regulatory 
process proved to be too difficult or too time-consuming. The 
bottom line, I concluded, was that I didn’t intend to invest any 
more money—or to begin any construction—until I got a 
decision one way or the other on my licensing. 

The attorney general said to me, “No, Mr. Trump, you’re 
not right about New Jersey. The licensing process can work 
here efficiently. I can’t give you any promises about the 



outcome of your investigation. We may find out that you’re 
not licensable. What I can promise is that if you cooperate 
fully, we’ll give you an answer one way or the other in six 
months.” Then he turned to his director of gaming 
enforcement and said, “Isn’t that true?” 

The director tried to walk a tightrope. “Well, we’ll do our 
best,” he said, “but it may take a year.” 

At that point, I jumped back in. “Well, if it takes a year,” I 
said, “then I’m out of here. I’m prepared to cooperate fully, 
but I’m not going to sit around twiddling my thumbs waiting 
for answers.” The attorney general nodded, and his director 
agreed. It was clear that six months was our timetable, and 
they would try very hard to meet it. 

The next thing we did was to sit down with the members of 
the Casino Control Commission staff. In order to build a 
casino, you need approval on everything from room size to 
casino layout, from the number of restaurants to the size of the 
health club. Our intention was to provide the regulators with 
detailed building plans and architectural drawings well in 
advance of our construction, so that before we got started 
building, they’d have a chance to review our plans and tell us 
what changes they wanted. 

Other operators—experienced in running casinos, but not in 
building them—hadn’t bothered with this sort of planning. In 
a rush to get their facilities up and open, many began 
construction before they got final approvals—only to have the 



regulators show up and say, “No, this room is too small,” or 
“No, this slot machine needs to be there instead of here.” 
From long experience, I know that midconstruction changes 
are extremely costly and perhaps the key reason so many 
major projects suffer huge cost overruns. 

With so many regulators and regulations to satisfy, we had 
one major advantage: the fact that we are not a bureaucracy. In 
most large public corporations, getting an answer to a question 
requires going through seven layers of executives, most of 
whom are superfluous in the first place. In our organization, 
anyone with a question could bring it directly to me and get an 
answer immediately. That’s precisely why I’ve been able to 
act so much faster than my competitors on so many deals. 

Sure enough, the gaming division concluded its 
investigation and issued its report on October 16, 1981, nearly 
six months from the day they began. They had lived up to 
their word. Better yet, both Robert and I got an absolutely 
clean bill. The Division of Gaming Enforcement 
recommended licensing both of us. 

My actual licensing hearings weren’t scheduled for several 
months after the enforcement division report was complete. In 
the meantime, we managed to get all the necessary approvals 
for our construction. Among them was permission from the 
city to build a skyway connection between our facility and the 
convention center next door. One consequence was that we 
could build part of our facility over the road and thus end up 



with one of the biggest hotels in town on one of the smaller 
sites. Unlike the owners of many of the Boardwalk hotels, we 
oriented our rooms and restaurants to the ocean. With such 
beautiful views available, why not take maximum advantage 
of them? 

The second issue we worked on was financing—which was 
hardly a given. Most banks had an unwritten policy against 
making loans in the gaming business, because gaming had an 
unsavory reputation. My problem, ironically, was almost the 
opposite. Our reputation among banks was very good, but 
when it came to the gaming business, we had no track record 
at all. My solution was to try using that to our advantage. 
Better to lend to a reputable company with a clean slate, I’d 
say, than to an experienced gaming operator with a 
questionable reputation. Also, I said, because we were proven 
developers and builders, we were in a far better position than 
most casino companies were to assure any lender that we’d 
come in on time and on budget. 

Manufacturers Hanover, which had helped finance the 
Grand Hyatt, was among the banks that had a vague policy 
against making loans in the gaming business. Nonetheless, 
they agreed to provide me with funding because of our 
successful relationship in building the Hyatt. I wasn’t thrilled 
about the terms they were offering us, but it was hard for me 
to complain: I was lucky to get financing at all. 

On March 15, 1982, with provisional financing in place and 



all my architectural and building plans approved, I went to 
Trenton, New Jersey, for licensing hearings before the Casino 
Control Commission. Hearings for other companies had 
sometimes dragged on for six to eight weeks. Shortly after 
10:15 a.m. I took the stand. I testified for seventeen minutes. 
Just before noon, the commissioners voted unanimously to 
license both Robert and me, as well as our corporate entity, the 
Trump Plaza Corporation. I was finally on my way. 

Then something totally serendipitous happened. One 
morning in June, I got a call at my office from a man named 
Michael Rose. I was impressed. I’d never met the man, but I 
knew that he was the chairman of Holiday Inns. I picked up 
the phone, and Rose introduced himself. He was very 
pleasant, and he said he’d like to come up from Memphis to 
see me. 

I didn’t even ask the reason. A guy in Rose’s position 
doesn’t suggest a meeting unless he’s got something worth 
talking about. Also, I was fairly sure I knew his agenda. I 
assumed he was interested in buying a property I’d purchased 
a couple of years earlier, the Barbizon-Plaza Hotel on Central 
Park South and Avenue of the Americas. I knew Holiday Inns 
had been looking for a prestigious location in New York City, 
and I’d let the word out in the real estate community that I 
might consider selling the Barbizon for the right price. 

A week later, Mike Rose came to see me. Robert and 
Harvey Freeman joined us. Rose was an impressive-looking 



guy, tall, well-dressed, and very much the gentleman. I 
launched right into a pitch about what a great piece of 
property the Barbizon was, an incredible location, a piece of 
the rock, nothing like it, how smart he was to come and see 
me about it. While I really didn’t want to sell it, I said, perhaps 
I could be convinced in this case. For ten minutes I just ranted 
and raved while Mike Rose, the chairman of Holiday Inns, sat 
and listened very politely without saying anything. Finally, 
looking a little embarrassed, he said to me, “I don’t think you 
understand, Donald. I’m not interested in the Barbizon-Plaza. 
I’m interested in being your partner in Atlantic City. That’s 
what I’m here to talk about.” 

I like to pride myself on rolling with the punches. I had 
never thought of a partner in Atlantic City, but I jumped right 
back in and started talking with the same enthusiasm about our 
plans there. I said that we had the best site on the Boardwalk, 
that we’d designed the best facility, that we had our approvals 
and financing in place, and that we planned to be open for 
business in less than two years. 

Two things intrigued me immediately about Holiday Inns. 
First, the company had a lot of gaming experience. Second, 
they had the ability to finance the deal themselves, which 
could take me off the hook personally. What wasn’t clear to 
me was why Rose might be interested in a partnership. 
Holiday already owned one successful casino in Atlantic City, 
Harrah’s at the Marina. I knew they were interested in a 
Boardwalk casino, but they had already bought a very costly 



Boardwalk site, and Pd just assumed that’s where they’d 
build. 

Nonetheless, I decided to play a little coy. After all, he’d 
come to see me. “Listen, Mike,” I said, “I have my financing. I 
have my license, and I have my approvals. Frankly, I don’t 
need a partner. But what is it exactly that you have in mind?” 

Rose explained that he was interested in my site by virtue of 
its location, but more important, because of my reputation as a 
builder who came in on time and on budget. Like most other 
casino operators, Holiday had experienced endless problems 
in construction and had run over budget by tens of millions of 
dollars on Harrah’s Marina. Rose particularly liked the idea, 
he said, that we were already under construction. The point, 
Rose concluded, was that Holiday simply couldn’t justify 
major overruns to stockholders a second time. Making a deal 
with us, he said, seemed like a good way to marry their 
management expertise with our ability as builders. 

Rose had a specific deal in mind. We’d build the hotel, 
they’d manage it, and we’d split the profits fifty-fifty. In 
addition, he said, they’d put up $50 million of their own 
money toward construction and reimburse me immediately for 
approximately $22 million of my expenses up to that point. 
We also agreed they’d take over responsibility for financing 
and use the Holiday Inns guarantee to get us a very prime rate. 
As a final inducement to make the deal, Rose said that Holiday 
would guarantee me against any operating losses for a period 



of five years from the date the casino opened and pay me a 
large construction fee. 

This was almost too good to believe. Several times, I looked 
over at Robert and Harvey just to see if perhaps I was missing 
something. They just smiled. By the time Mike Rose left my 
office, we had shaken hands on the basic elements of a 
partnership in Atlantic City. It was still subject to the drawing 
of documents, and to approval from his board of directors. I 
assumed that they’d exact some concessions along the way. 
B u t as long as the basic concept remained intact—no 
downside for me and a 50 percent share of the upside—it was 
an extraordinary deal. Better yet, I still believed I was about to 
enter into a partnership with a quality company, run by highly 
competent casino and hotel operators. After all, I thought, 
what the hell did I know about running a huge casino-hotel 
anyway? 

Once we’d finished our negotiations, the final step was 
approval of the deal by Holiday’s board of directors. In many 
situations, board approval of management initiatives is merely 
a formality. In this case, I worried that Rose might use his 
board to help him get out of the deal, or at least force changes 
in it. 

Rose scheduled his annual board of directors meeting in 
Atlantic City so that the board would have an opportunity to 
see the proposed site and also to assess our progress in 
construction. It was the latter that worried me, since we had 



yet to do much work on the site. One week before the board 
meeting, I got an idea. 

I called in my construction supervisor and told him that I 
wanted him to round up every bulldozer and dump truck he 
could possibly find, and put them to work on my site 
immediately. Over the next week, I said, I wanted him to 
transform my two acres of nearly vacant property into the 
most active construction site in the history of the world. What 
the bulldozers and dump trucks did wasn’t important, I said, 
so long as they did a lot of it. If they got some actual work 
accomplished, all the better, but if necessary, he should have 
the bulldozers dig up dirt from one side of the site and dump it 
on the other. They should keep doing that, I said, until I gave 
him other instructions. 

The supervisor looked a little bewildered. “Mr. Trump,” he 
said, “I have to tell you that I’ve been in business for a lot of 
years and this is the strangest request I’ve ever gotten. But I’ll 
do my best.” 

One week later, I accompanied top Holiday Inns executives 
and the entire board of directors out to the Boardwalk. It 
looked as if we were in the midst of building the Grand 
Coulee Dam. There were so many pieces of machinery on this 
site that they could barely maneuver around each other. These 
distinguished corporate leaders looked on, some of them 
visibly awed. I’ll never forget one of them turning to me, 
shaking his head, and saying, “You know, it’s great when 



you’re a private guy, and you can just pull out all the stops.” 

A few minutes later, another board member walked over to 
me. His question was very simple. “How come,” he said, “that 
guy over there is filling up that hole, which he just dug?” This 
was difficult for me to answer, but fortunately, this board 
member was more curious than he was skeptical. The board 
walked away from the site absolutely convinced that it was the 
perfect choice. Three weeks later, on June 30, 1982, we 
signed a partnership agreement. 

Our budget was $220 million—$50 million from Holiday 
directly, $170 million on a loan they guaranteed—and that 
included everything: carrying costs, construction, operating 
expenses, and required cash reserves. We projected 
completion in May 1984, but I was confident we could finish 
ahead of schedule, and even under budget, based on how 
carefully we’d done our planning. 

One way we stood to save money was from something 
known as value engineering. Say, for example, that your 
architect shows you a certain door he wants to use, which has 
four hinges on it. Before you approve the door, you have 
your engineer look at it, and perhaps he says, “Look, you only 
need two hinges to hang that door, or three if you want to do a 
really good job.” So you eliminate one ten-dollar hinge, and 
you multiply that times 2,000 doors, and the saving on that 
one tiny item comes to $20,000. Another good example was 
the installation of the cooling towers for our air-conditioning 



system. Originally our architects placed them on the roof of 
the hotel tower. Through value engineering we determined 
that we’d save a lot of money by installing them on a lower 
section of roof, just seven floors up, because that roof could 
be poured much sooner. In turn we’d be able to start all the 
piping and electrical work for the air-conditioning six months 
earlier. 

The second way we saved money was by producing very 
complete plans, so that contractors could bid on every aspect 
of the job. When you have incomplete drawings, a smart 
contractor will often come in and underbid the job just to get 
it, knowing he’ll be able to more than cover his costs through 
the change orders that inevitably occur as plans become more 
complete. 

The final thing that helped us keep costs down was the state 
of the construction industry in Atlantic City in the spring of 
1982. The only casino still under construction by then was the 
Tropicana, and thousands of local construction workers were 
either out of work or about to be. That gave us a lot of 
leverage with contractors, who had to either cover a certain 
overhead or go out of business. I wasn’t looking to force 
these guys to make such bad deals that they’d lose money. On 
the other hand, I was in a position to negotiate very reasonable 
prices. 

I got the building finished right on schedule for a May 14 
opening. That meant we’d be able to take advantage of the 



Memorial Day weekend, traditionally the three biggest days of 
the year for the casino business in Atlantic City. I also came in 
slightly under the original budget, at $218 million. It 
represented the first casino-hotel in Atlantic City ever built on 
time and on budget. 

On May 14, the casino opened to a public response that 
exceeded my wildest expectations. It was a major media event 
attended by thousands of people, including most of New 
Jersey’s principal officials. The governor, Thomas Kean, was 
the main speaker, and he was extremely generous in praising 
what we had accomplished. His praise was echoed by Richard 
Goeglein, then president of Harrah’s, who told the crowd that 
for us to have completed such a huge facility on time and on 
budget was “a near miracle in this day and age.” 

The moment we opened the doors, thousands of people 
poured in. Everyone was hungry to check out the newest 
game in town. In a matter of minutes, they were lined up three 
and four deep at the tables and the slot machines. 

It is public knowledge, of course, that Holiday Inns and I 
had many, many disagreements over the management of the 
facility. But under the agreement I finally made to buy out 
Holiday’s share, I am precluded from saying anything in 
detail about those conflicts. While my attorneys unanimously 
believe that I would win any legal battle over my First 
Amendment rights on this issue, that’s just not the way I do 
business. As far as I’m concerned, a deal is a deal, and I live 



up to what I’ve agreed to, even if I don’t believe I’m 
technically obligated by any specific contractual provision. 

Suffice it to say that my ultimate buyout of Holiday Inns’ 
share of our casino-hotel in February 1986 was one of my 
most savored transactions. 

One reason that I particularly liked owning the facility 
myself—rather than with any partner—has to do with the 
value of depreciation. Depreciation is the percentage of the 
total value of a building that an owner is permitted to deduct 
each year from his taxable earnings. The rationale is that 
money spent to maintain a building—to offset its normal wear 
and tear—shouldn’t be taxable. 

Put simply, depreciation permits you to pay lower taxes on 
your earnings. For example, if the cost of our facility in 
Atlantic City was $400 million and we were permitted to 
depreciate at the rate of 4 percent a year, that would mean we 
could deduct $16 million from our taxable profits each year. 
In other words, if we earned a pretax profit of $16 million, 
our earnings, after depreciation, would actually be reported as 
zero. 

Most shareholders and Wall Street types only look at the 
bottom line, which shows a profit reduced by depreciation. As 
a result, corporate managers don’t like depreciation much. It 
only makes them appear less successful. But I don’t have to 
please Wall Street, and so I appreciate depreciation. For me 
the relevant issue isn’t what I report on the bottom line, it’s 



what I get to keep. 

The best part of the deal, however, was the facility I now 
owned outright. Merely by running it myself, I felt certain, I 
could earn a far bigger profit. In addition, I planned to build 
new suites and restaurants. 

Financing, of course, now became my responsibility. The 
prime rate had been around 14 percent when I first started 
looking at property in Atlantic City. By mid-1986, it had 
dropped to 9 percent. My problem with bank financing, even 
at these lower rates, was that I’d still be required to put myself 
personally on the line for the money. I didn’t find that 
appealing. 

As a result, I decided to seek public financing for the 
project, through a bond issue. The downside was that I’d have 
to pay a higher interest rate to attract buyers, but the upside 
was that once the issue sold out, I wouldn’t be personally 
liable. In the end, Bear Stearns was able to sell an offering for 
$250 million—which not only covered the $50 million cash 
due to Holiday but also permitted me to pay off the $170 
million mortgage on the building and left me the money to 
build a suitable parking facility. Interest payments on the 
financing came to just above $30 million a year. That was 
about $7 million a year more than I’d have paid for bank 
financing, but to me it was money well spent. By relieving me 
of personal financial liability, it assured I’d sleep better at 
night. 



During this same period, I hired a new general manager for 
the facility, which I had renamed Trump Plaza Hotel and 
Casino. I looked first at my best competitors. At the time, 
Stephen Hyde was executive vice president and chief 
operating officer under Steve Wynn at the Golden Nugget. 
Before that, he’d worked at the Sands and at Caesars, both top 
casinos. When I asked people in town to name the best casino 
executives, Hyde was always at the top of the list. As soon as 
we met, I understood why. He had a lot of gaming experience, 
he was a very sharp guy and highly competitive, but most of 
all, he had a sense of how to manage to the bottom line. A lot 
of managers focus on maximizing revenue since that’s what 
gets reported publicly most often. The smarter guys 
understand that while big revenues are great, the real issue is 
the spread between the revenues and costs—because that’s 
your profit. 

No sooner had I hired Steve than we turned around and 
hired away a dozen of the best people who’d worked for him 
over the years, including Paul Patay, the number-one food- 
and-beverage man in Atlantic City. I have a very simple rule 
when it comes to management: hire the best people from your 
competitors, pay them more than they were earning, and give 
them bonuses and incentives based on their performance. 
That’s how you build a first-class operation. 

In 1985, the first full year of operation under Harrah’s 
management, the facility earned a gross operating profit of 
approximately $35 million before interest, taxes, and 



depreciation. For 1986, Harrah’s projected a gross operating 
profit of $38 million. Based on the first five months during 
which they continued to manage the facility, they were 
running just slightly under projections. 

We took over on May 16. For the full year, our gross 
operating profit was nearly $58 million, or $20 million more 
than Harrah’s had projected. This was despite the fact that in 
June we closed down our existing parking lot to begin 
construction on the new garage. We’re estimating that by 
1988 our gross operating profit will reach $90 million. 

By all rights, that should be the end of the story. However, 
success running the Boardwalk facility with my own 
management made me see a broader opportunity. Specifically, 
I started to look around at other possible deals to buy 
companies that owned casinos. Holiday Inns was an obvious 
target. Even after selling me the Boardwalk facility, they still 
owned three other casinos—one in Atlantic City and two in 
Nevada—as well as nearly a thousand hotels around the 
world. 

As a result, in mid-August, two months after buying them 
out in Atlantic City, I began purchasing stock in Holiday. By 
September 9, I’d purchased nearly 5 percent of the company, 
or some one million shares. At that point, I had two basic 
options: One was to hold the stock as an investment. The other 
was to go for control. 

I had no doubt the company was undervalued. For one 



thing, because they owned so much real estate, they were 
entitled to large write-offs for depreciation. Therefore they 
reported net profits far below what they were actually able to 
retain. On the basis of a stock price of $54 a share in early 
August 1986, I was in a position to purchase effective control 
of the company for not much more than $1 billion. In one 
scenario, for example, I would sell off all of the noncasino 
hotels—perhaps for as much as $700 million —and retain just 
the three casino-hotels, which by themselves were worth 
nearly that much. 

No sooner did word get out that I’d begun accumulating 
Holiday Inns stock than its price started to rise. I assume 
arbitrageurs were buying up the stock, figuring that either I’d 
make a move for control, or someone else would. By early 
October, the price of the stock had reached 72. 

On Wednesday, November 11, I heard from Alan 
Greenberg of Bear Stearns that Holiday was restructuring the 
company to fend off any potential hostile bid and was going 
to borrow $2.8 billion in order to pay an immediate $65-a- 
share dividend to the shareholders. The stock jumped to 76. 
Without hesitation, I told Alan to sell, and he agreed. I still 
believe I could have overcome any barriers Holiday tried to 
put in my way, but I just wasn’t particularly eager to spend 
my life in the court with these guys. The alternative—earning 
a huge profit on my investment without any battle—seemed 
far more appealing. By the end of the week I’d sold my entire 
stake in Holiday Inns—meaning that in just eight weeks, I 



earned a profit of many millions of dollars. Looked at another 
way, I earned back from my Holiday Inns stock much of the 
money I’d paid them just three months earlier to buy their 
share of my casino in Atlantic City. 

Obviously, I can’t complain. Perhaps no one was better 
rewarded by Holiday than I was. But, in a way, I got 
something even more valuable than money from the 
experience: a first-hand view of corporate management in 
America. 



9 

WYNN-FALL 


The Battle for Hilton 


I N MY WILDEST FANTASY, it never occurred to me that I would 

someday purchase the huge casino-hotel that the Hilton 
Hotels Corporation began building in Atlantic City in 
1984. To the contrary, I watched with some dismay the 
progress of construction. I hardly relished another tough 
competitor in town, especially when the Boardwalk hotel I 
owned with Harrah’s wasn’t performing well even against the 
existing competition. Worse yet, it was quite obvious that 
Hilton—after several years of indecision about Atlantic City— 
was finally going all-out with a major facility. 

To me, Hilton was a hard company to figure. It was 
founded in 1921 by Conrad Hilton, who built it into one of 
the great hotel chains in the world. His son Barron joined the 
company in the 1950s, and of course it was only a matter of 
time before he took over. It had nothing to do with merit; it’s 
called birthright. In 1966, Conrad finally retired, and Barron 
was named chief executive. It’s not easy to make your own 
mark on a company your father founded and built into a huge 




success. Some sons opt out altogether and don’t even try to 
compete. Others are content to manage what their fathers have 
already built. A few sons set out to outdo their fathers at the 
same game, and that may be the toughest thing of all, 
particularly when the father’s name is Conrad Hilton. 

Barron’s first major responsibility, back in 1959, was to run 
Hilton’s Carte Blanche credit card business, which they’d just 
bought. He screwed it up and Carte Blanche lost millions of 
dollars over the next six years. Hilton finally threw in the 
towel in 1966 and sold out to Citibank. In 1967, Barron 
convinced his father to sell Hilton’s international hotel 
division to TWA in exchange for TWA stock, which was 
selling for about $90 a share. There was just one problem: 
OPEC. Almost immediately, oil prices started going through 
the roof, which devastated the airlines. Within eighteen 
months, TWA stock had dropped by half, and by 1974, it was 
down to $5 a share. Until Carl Icahn took control of the 
company and turned it around recently, the stock was worth 
far less than it should have been. On the other hand, the 
international hotels that Hilton sold, which were recently sold 
again for close to $1 billion, did great business. They earned 
about $70 million in 1983—almost as much as Hilton earned 
from all its American hotels the same year. That’s partly 
because Hilton, resting on its past reputation, had lost 
considerable ground in the luxury market to more aggressive 
competitors such as Marriott and Hyatt. The once-great Hilton 
name ceased being synonymous with the best in hotels. 



Barron Hilton did make one decision that proved 
successful: getting into casino gambling. In 1972 Hilton 
purchased two Nevada casinos for about $12 million—the Las 
Vegas Hilton and the Flamingo Hilton. Together, the two 
casinos began to account for a growing percentage of Hilton’s 
profits—30 percent in 1976, 40 percent in 1981, and 45 
percent, or some $70 million, in 1985. 

Despite that success, Barron couldn’t seem to make up his 
mind about Atlantic City. Hilton purchased a site at the Marina 
around the time gambling was legalized, began moving 
forward, stopped suddenly, and then started again half¬ 
heartedly. By the time Hilton finally committed to construction 
in 1984, most of its major Nevada competitors—including 
Bally, Caesars, Harrah’s, Sands, and the Golden Nugget— 
already had their facilities up, operating, and earning huge 
profits in Atlantic City. 

I have to say this much for Hilton: having finally made the 
commitment, it left no doubt it was going all-out. With an 
eight-acre site, one of the biggest in town, Hilton was 
determined to build on a grand scale—a huge, majestic 
entrance, ceilings thirty feet high, a 3,000-car self-park 
garage. Hilton described the project in its annual report as “the 
largest undertaking in our history.” With a casino of some 
60,000 square feet, and a 615-room hotel above it, the facility 
was comparable in size to Harrah’s at Trump Plaza—which at 
the time was one of the largest in town. The difference was 
that Hilton’s master plan included a second-phase expansion, 



to some 100,000 feet of casino space, and more than 2,000 
guest rooms. 

Hungry to start recouping its investment as soon as 
possible, Hilton began construction at the same time it filed for 
a gaming license. As I explained earlier, the risk of getting 
turned down for a license midway through construction was 
the reason I’d gone after licensing first. But everyone else had 
done it Hilton’s way, and I could understand Hilton’s 
confidence about licensing. 

For starters, it was already licensed in Nevada. In addition, 
at a time when virtually no other construction was going on in 
Atlantic City, Hilton was making a huge investment in a 
mostly undeveloped part of town. Perhaps most important, in 
a business scarcely known for attracting boy scout companies, 
the Hilton name was about as all-American as you could hope 
to find. The licensing process seemed like little more than a 
formality for Hilton. 

The problem was that the Hilton people got a little too smug 
and full of themselves. They assumed they were doing 
Atlantic City a favor by coming to town, when in fact the 
licensing authorities see it just the opposite way. The burden 
of demonstrating suitability for a license rests entirely with the 
applicant, no matter who it is. Hilton took the view that it was 
entitled to a license. It was a critical mistake. 

I began to hear rumblings that Hilton was in trouble early in 
1985. Atlantic City is a very political town, and everyone who 



does business there knows that. Hilton, trying to be smart, 
hired a very political lawyer. On the face of it, that seemed like 
a savvy move. However, according to people I knew who 
were familiar with the Hilton licensing hearings, it may have 
backfired. 

The second mistake Hilton made was ignoring the 
experience of previous applicants. Playboy, for example, had 
been turned down for a license three years before. The reason, 
at least in part, was its past associations with a lawyer named 
Sidney Korshak, who supposedly had a history of organized- 
crime connections. For ten years he’d also been on retainer to 
Hilton at $50,000 a year to help negotiate labor disputes. I 
have no idea whether Korshak is a good guy or a bad guy, but 
the only issue that matters is pleasing the commissioners. 
They’d made it very clear that they didn’t like Korshak. 
Instead of quietly severing the tie, Hilton kept Korshak on his 
retainer right up until the Division of Gaming Enforcement 
raised specific objections to him in mid-1984. 

Virtually the next day, Hilton fired Korshak. Barron later 
acknowledged to the commission that he’d taken the action 
only because “we know how strongly you people feel about 
the matter.” That was the worst thing he could have said. As 
one of the commissioners who voted against licensing Hilton 
put it later, “The corporation apparently didn’t get religion 
until it was pounding on the pearly gates of licensure.” 

It didn’t help when Barron later testified that Korshak had 



never interceded on Hilton’s behalf to prevent certain unions 
from striking Hilton’s hotels. Within weeks of that testimony, 
Korshak wrote Barron a letter, which he released to the media. 
It described in great detail exactly the work he’d done for 
Hilton in Las Vegas. It also included copies of letters Barron 
Hilton had written thanking Korshak for his efforts. The end 
of Korshak’s letter was devastating. “You have caused me 
irreparable harm,” he wrote Barron, “and as long as I live I 
will never forget that. When did I become a shady character? I 
imagine when you were having difficulty getting a license in 
Atlantic City.” 

Hilton might have survived everything if Barron himself 
had taken the licensing hearings more seriously. Instead he 
virtually ignored them. One of the few times he saw fit to 
show up in New Jersey was for his own testimony before the 
Casino Control Commission. Nor were any of his top 
corporate executives there for most of the hearings. 

On February 14, 1985, I was in my office when I got a 
phone call from a guy named A1 Glasgow, who publishes a 
newsletter about the gaming industry called Atlantic City 
Action. A1 is a true Damon Runyon character who lives and 
breathes gaming. He knows as much as anyone in town about 
who’s doing what to whom. “Did you hear about Hilton?” A1 
asked. I said, “No, what?” And he said, “They just got turned 
down for a license.” 

I thought he was kidding at first. Approval requires the 



concurrence of four commissioners. Hilton won a majority, 
but as was the case with Hugh Hefner, 3-2 in favor was a 
loss, not a win. In any case, A1 said he suspected there was a 
possibility Hilton might just decide to put the facility up for 
sale rather than try to fight for a rehearing. 

Hilton was scheduled to open the hotel in less than twelve 
weeks. They’d already hired more than a thousand employees, 
and they were adding at the rate of approximately a hundred 
people a day. By opening day, they’d have approximately 
four thousand people on the payroll. With that payroll and no 
income coming in, you’re talking catastrophe, no matter how 
big the company. At the very least, Hilton was under severe 
time pressure to get an appeal heard by the commission. Even 
so, I assumed that with more than $300 million already 
invested, they were going to do whatever they could to try to 
get licensed. 

After talking with Glasgow, and a few other people in 
Atlantic City, I decided to call Barron Hilton out in California. 
As much as anything else, it was a condolence call. You 
couldn’t help feeling sorry for the man. “Hi, Barron, how are 
you?” I said. Not surprisingly, Barron replied, “Not well, not 
well at all.” “I can imagine,” I went on, “because what 
happened is just too bad.” “I’ve got to tell you, Donald,” he 
said, “that I didn’t expect it, it caught me totally by surprise.” I 
told him that the move had caught everyone by surprise, and 
the conversation just went on like that. 



Before hanging up, I got to the business part of the call. 
“Look, Barron,” I said, “I have no idea what you want to do 
with this facility, but if for some reason you’re thinking of 
selling it, I’d be interested in buying it, if the price is right.” 
Barron said he’d keep that in mind, and he thanked me for 
calling. I think he genuinely appreciated it. I also figured that 
was as far as things would get. Hilton already had plans to file 
for a rehearing, and I still believed that the commission would 
eventually reverse its decision. 

At the beginning of March I got a call from a friend named 
Benjamin Lambert, who runs Eastdil Realty. I’d first met 
Lambert ten years before, when I was just beginning to look 
for a hotel-chain partner for the Commodore Hotel deal. He 
made some suggestions, and over the years, Ben and I worked 
on several deals together. We had our disagreements, but the 
bottom line was that we were friends. As it happened, Ben 
was a member of Hilton’s board of directors. In the weeks 
after Hilton was turned down for a license, we talked a few 
times about the situation. Ben believed Hilton ought to 
seriously consider selling. 

On this occasion, Ben was calling to invite me to a party he 
was holding for the Hilton board at his townhouse, prior to 
their annual meeting that week in New York. As he put it, 
“It’s not an inopportune time for you and Barron to meet 
about current events.” 

The board, it turned put, was deeply split about how to 



handle the Atlantic City situation. The Casino Control 
Commission had just agreed to the rehearing Hilton had 
requested on licensing. Nonetheless, several board members, 
including Ben, believed that it made more sense to sell the 
facility immediately, if the right buyer could be found. Their 
argument was that if the commission didn’t reverse itself and 
grant Hilton a license, the consequences could be truly 
disastrous for the company. By that point, a couple of months 
down the line, they’d be carrying several thousand employees. 
Worse, by selling the hotel under pressure, they might get a 
bad price. 

I went to the party, and Ben introduced me to Barron, 
whom I’d never met in person. We ended up walking out to 
the garden and talking alone together. Once again the 
conversation was nonspecific. Mostly, Barron vented his 
frustration about Atlantic City, while I listened 
sympathetically. Barron is wary and reserved by nature. He’s 
not the kind of guy who makes impulsive decisions, so I 
played it very low-key. We got along very well, and afterward 
I heard from Ben that Barron felt very comfortable with me. 
There are times when you have to be aggressive, but there are 
also times when your best strategy is to lie back. 

Very shortly after that, Steve Wynn of the Golden Nugget 
decided to make a full-scale assault on Hilton, seeking control 
of the company. It was probably the best thing that could have 
happened to me. If it hadn’t been for Wynn, I seriously doubt 
that Barron Hilton would ever have made a deal with me or 



anyone else for his Atlantic City hotel-casino. 

On April 14, Wynn wrote Barron a letter offering to buy a 
block of stock, amounting to 27 percent of the entire Hilton 
company, for $72 a share. At the time, the stock was trading 
for approximately $67 a share. Wynn also said he was 
prepared, if his initial offer was accepted, to pay the same $72 
per share to all Hilton shareholders. 

Ironically, Wynn could never have gone after the company 
at all if it hadn’t been for Conrad Hilton. When Conrad died in 
1979, he totally screwed Barron. There is no nicer way to say 
it. The assumption had been that Conrad would pass on his 
near-controlling interest in the company to Barron—or at the 
very least that he’d spread it among family members. 

Instead, Conrad Hilton used his will to disenfranchise his 
children and grandchildren. At the time of his death, Conrad’s 
stock in Hilton was worth perhaps $500 million. But Conrad 
believed very strongly that inherited wealth destroys moral 
character and motivation. I happen to agree that it often does. 

To me, it makes sense to put money in trust for your 
children, so they don’t inherit millions of dollars when they 
turn twenty-one. But Conrad took that view to a ridiculous 
extreme. He left Barron a token number of shares of stock, 
and he left each of his grandchildren a piddling $10,000 each. 
Nearly all the rest of his wealth—specifically his 27 percent 
share of the Hilton Corporation—he left to the Conrad N. 
Hilton Foundation. He ordered most of the earnings from the 



stake to be used to support the charitable work of Catholic 
nuns in California. 

The result was to make Barron just another high-level 
corporate manager who lacked the power of a major 
stockholder. Even with the stock options that he exercised 
over ten years as chief executive, Barron still owned only a 
tiny percentage of the company by 1985. 

What Barron did was to enter into litigation, seeking control 
of the foundation’s shares. His chances of winning the case, 
which had dragged on for years, were uncertain. For one 
thing, he had the sort of adversaries you want to avoid in a 
litigation: nuns and priests of the Catholic Church. 

Conrad’s will had specified that if for any reason the 
foundation was unable to accept his stock bequest, Barron had 
the right to purchase the stock at its market value as of 1979. 
Federal law prohibits charitable foundations and their 
affiliated parties from together owning more than 20 percent 
of a public company. Therefore, Barron could legitimately 
argue that he was entitled to purchase for himself the 7 percent 
of the foundation’s shares that were in excess of the 
foundation’s allowable 20 percent. 

But Barron tried to take his claim much further. Basically, 
he tried to argue that for byzantine legal reasons he was 
entitled to buy out the foundation’s entire stake. Moreover, by 
buying its stock for the 1979 price of 24%—at a time when 
the stock was trading around 72—in effect he’d be paying 



$170 million for $500 million worth of stock. 

It’s called a great deal. It may also be called trying to rewrite 
your father’s will. My strong suspicion is that Barron knew 
his chances of winning the litigation were questionable. More 
to the point, if he couldn’t get control of the stock, he was in a 
far weaker position to fend off Steve Wynn or any hostile 
takeover threat. Finally, so long as he held on to his Atlantic 
City facility but remained unlicensable, he was also highly 
vulnerable to shareholder lawsuits. 

I have no doubt how I would have reacted if I had been 
Barron Hilton. I would have fought Steve Wynn and his 
takeover threat, and I would also have fought for my license at 
the rehearing. I’m not saying I would also have won, but if I 
went down, it would have been kicking and screaming. I 
would have closed the hotel and let it rot. That’s just my 
makeup. I fight when I feel I’m getting screwed, even if it’s 
costly and difficult and highly risky. 

But then, I wasn’t running a public company, so I didn’t 
have to worry constantly about Wall Street and shareholders 
and the next quarterly-earnings report. The only person I had 
to please was myself. In the end, I think, Barron decided that 
he just wasn’t prepared to fight on two fronts at the same time 
—for licensing as well as for control of his company. And of 
the two, control of the company obviously came first. 

Steve Wynn helped me in two ways. By pursuing a 
takeover, he put Barron on the defensive and kept him from 



focusing on his relicensing hearings. At the same time, the 
more Wynn’s aggressive style offended Barron, the more 
likely it was that Barron would turn to me as a white knight. 

It’s not a role I’m accustomed to, but Wynn played right 
into my hand. Wynn grew up in his father’s bingo parlor, the 
son of a compulsive gambler. Later he made the right friends 
in Las Vegas, managed to buy a small stake in the Golden 
Nugget Hotel, and eventually took over. His entire world has 
been Las Vegas and Atlantic City and gaming. He’s got a 
great act. He’s a smooth talker, he’s perfectly manicured, and 
he’s invariably dressed to kill in $2,000 suits and $200 silk 
shirts. The problem with Wynn is that he tries too hard to look 
perfect and a lot of people are put off by him. Barron Hilton 
was one. 

It’s hard to imagine two people with more different styles. 
Barron is a member of what I call the Lucky Sperm Club. He 
was born wealthy and bred to be an aristocrat, and he is one of 
those guys who never had to prove anything to anyone. He 
doesn’t try to impress with his style or his clothing or 
anything else. If Steve Wynn tries too hard, it might be said 
that Barron Hilton doesn’t try hard enough. 

Although Steve would probably never admit it, I’m 
convinced that he thought he was in a no-lose situation when 
he launched his takeover bid against Hilton. I believe Steve 
figured he’d end up buying Hilton’s Atlantic City hotel, and 
quite possibly at a favorable price. Many people thought that 



the hotel was all Steve really wanted. There was even a certain 
logic to it. Under siege from all sides, Barron could kill two 
birds with one stone by dealing with Steve. He could say, 
“Look, I’ll sell you my hotel if you’ll agree to give up trying 
to get control of my company.” 

But Steve Wynn underestimated how much he’d become 
anathema to Barron. That’s where I came in. One day after 
Wynn made his takeover bid, Barron Hilton became much 
more serious about negotiating with me. 

My first offer to Hilton was $250 million. As big a number 
as that is, I knew Barron wasn’t going to sell for that price. He 
told me when we first met that he had $320 million invested in 
the facility. Selling out at any price was a horrible prospect for 
him, but reporting to shareholders that he’d taken a loss on the 
facility was out of the question. Within a couple of days, I 
raised my price to $320 million. There was no time to be cute, 
and no room to be tough in this negotiation. Either I bid the 
price, or I walked away. 

At the time $320 million—even $250 million—represented 
by far the biggest gamble I’d ever taken in my life. Just a year 
earlier, I’d completed construction on the Boardwalk facility 
for less than $220 million. In that case Holiday financed the 
entire deal and guaranteed me against operating losses. 

This time, the risk was entirely mine. 

As soon as I decided to bid $320 million, I called John 
Torell, a good friend who is president of Manufacturers 



Hanover Trust. We’d already done a great deal of business 
together and on this occasion we had an amazingly short 
conversation. “John,” I said, “I’m calling because I have an 
opportunity to buy the incredible Hilton facility in Atlantic 
City for three hundred and twenty million dollars. I’d like you 
to lend me the money, and I’m going to need it within a 
week.” John asked me a couple of questions and after two 
minutes he said, “We have a deal.” Just like that. It goes to 
show you the value of credibility. In return, I did something 
I’d never done before: I personally guaranteed the loan. 

It was a deal based almost entirely on my gut. I made my 
bid without ever walking through the hotel. Several of my 
people had taken a look, and I’d gotten to know a lot about 
the construction from contractors who’d worked on the 
facility. However, I felt it wouldn’t be appropriate to show up 
myself in the middle of all the turmoil Hilton was going 
through. If I’d told my father the story, he would have said 
I’d lost my mind. I remember very well as a kid, 
accompanying my father to inspect buildings he was 
considering buying in Brooklyn. We might have been talking 
about a $100,000 or $200,000 purchase price, but our 
inspections were anything but casual. We’d spend hours in the 
building, checking every refrigerator and sink, looking over 
the boiler and the roof and the lobby. 

Nor would my father have been alone in his horror. In past 
situations, opinion about deals I was considering had usually 
been split. In this case, nearly everyone I talked to opposed 



the deal. 

I was having enough trouble on the Boardwalk with 
Holiday Inns, they pointed out. I had no management for this 
huge new facility scheduled to open in two months. I’d have 
to take on huge financial risk personally. I had only a verbal 
commitment from Manny Hanny, and it wasn’t clear what 
conditions they might ultimately add when documents were 
drawn—or whether they’d have second thoughts about the 
whole deal. There was even considerable doubt that the 
market could support another major facility, particularly one 
that would have to carry a huge debt service at a time when 
interest rates were still quite high. Why, everyone said to me, 
would I even consider this deal? 

For one reason only: I believed that, managed well, it had 
the potential to earn a ton of money. 

Once we agreed on a price, we still had a thousand other 
smaller points to negotiate before we could sign a formal 
purchase-and-sale agreement. On April 14, 1985, we sat down 
in Jerry Schrager’s offices at 101 Park Avenue, with the 
lawyers from both sides, to get the deal done. 

Often, the easiest part of a deal is price. It’s all the other 
points—in this case, guarantees about construction 
completion, responsibility for defects, size of deposit, 
allocation of expenses between contract and closing—that end 
up creating problems and killing deals. Hilton, from the very 
start, was taking a fairly hard line. Basically, they wanted to 



sell the hotel “as is,” so that when the contracts were signed, 
they could walk away from Atlantic City with no further 
obligations. Barron, by this time, was almost rabid in his 
hatred of New Jersey and particularly Atlantic City. The 
sooner he could put this nightmare behind him, the happier 
he’d be. 

The problem for me was that if I didn’t win some 
guarantees about completion of construction, I risked getting 
killed later on. Say, for example, that it turned out there was a 
major defect in the plumbing, or the air-conditioning system, 
and I was forced to rip it out. In a building this size, a major 
repair could easily run to many millions of dollars. 

Early on in the negotiations we seemed to be winning on 
the deal points that we cared about. But then, about midway 
through, the person in charge of Hilton’s negotiations— 
Gregory Dillon, the executive vice president of the company 
—got a call from Barron Hilton, who was back in San 
Francisco. When Dillon returned to the table, the whole tenor 
of the negotiation suddenly changed. I can’t say for certain, 
but it’s my strong suspicion that Barron had decided he 
wanted out of the deal, in all likelihood because he’d gotten a 
last-minute offer for more money. It’s even possible that the 
offer came from Steve Wynn and the Golden Nugget. 

In any case, Dillon and the Hilton lawyers suddenly began 
to raise questions about deal points that we’d agreed on. I’ve 
been in a lot of negotiations, and I sensed immediately that 



they were trying to use these points as deal-breakers. If we 
couldn’t agree on completion guarantees, for example, then 
they could walk away from the table without appearing to 
have welshed on the deal merely because they’d been offered 
a better price. 

We reached something of an impasse. Greg Dillon made a 
suggestion. “We’re not getting anywhere,” he said, “so let’s 
break this up and we’ll come back tomorrow and continue.” 
On the face of it, the suggestion made sense. It was early on 
Saturday morning. We’d been in the offices around-the-clock 
for nearly forty-eight hours and everyone was totally 
exhausted and nearly incoherent. But my fear was that if we 
put off the negotiations for a full day, the deal would never 
get done. As a compromise, I suggested we take a break for 
several hours and get back together about one in the 
afternoon. The Hilton people agreed, and we broke up. 

At that point my lawyers made one more attempt to 
convince me to let the deal die, gracefully. In particular, Jerry 
Schrager was concerned about the financing. Even at that 
point, we didn’t have a formal, signed commitment letter from 
Manufacturers Hanover. But to me, a verbal commitment from 
John Torell was as good as a signed commitment. Jerry’s 
point was that even if the commitment was firm, the 
guarantees I was being asked to make might make it hard for 
me to borrow money for other large deals. 

It was a very strange situation. As I sat in Jerry’s office, I 



wasn’t sure who was more eager to break up the deal: my 
lawyers or theirs. 

As it turned out, the Hilton team was more than two hours 
late in getting back, which only confirmed my suspicions. By 
the time they finally showed up, around three-thirty, I was 
convinced that the only way I’d get the deal done was to 
shame them into doing it. I stood up and began my pitch. 
How could they shake my hand and then not stand by the 
commitment? How could they negotiate for three days and 
then walk away? How could they force me to spend hundreds 
of thousands of dollars on lawyers and not follow through? It 
was a disgrace, I said. It was immoral, it was wrong, it was 
dishonorable. 

My tone was more hurt than outraged or angry. I can be a 
screamer when I want to be, but in this case I felt screaming 
would only scare them off. Much of the deal had already been 
negotiated, and under the circumstances, unless I gave Hilton 
a good excuse, it would be hard psychologically for them to 
walk away. It’s also possible, of course, that Hilton’s hard line 
was all a pose—a way of trying to ensure that they closed the 
deal with as few contingencies as possible. 

In the end, we reached a compromise. They would use their 
best efforts to ready the hotel for opening, and they’d agree to 
completion of a specific “punch list” of unfinished items. 
Also, they would allow me to hold back $5 million of the 
purchase price, subject to the facility’s being delivered 



complete and in first-class condition, as defined in specific 
terms in the contract. 

I assumed the construction was sound. If it turned out that I 
was wrong, and the defects I discovered ended up costing an 
additional $30 million, I believed Hilton would still be legally 
responsible. At 9:00 pm. on April 27, 198S, we shook hands 
and signed a formal contract. I turned over a nonrefundable 
$20 million deposit, and we set our closing for sixty days 
later. 

On May 1, I made my first visit to the facility I’d just 
purchased for $320 million. As soon as I walked in, I sensed 
I’d made a good decision. Much work remained to be done, 
but it was a spectacular-looking building. Immediately I began 
pushing all my people-very hard. Over the next six weeks we 
managed to accomplish what it had taken most other casinos 
as much as a year or more to do. We got our temporary 
certificate of occupancy, we finished the vast paperwork for 
our licensing, we hired 1,500 employees over and above those 
Hilton had hired, and we got the hotel and casino ready for 
opening. 

We also settled on the name Trump’s Castle. My first choice 
had actually been Trump Palace, but then Caesars Palace filed 
for an injunction on the grounds that it had exclusive rights to 
the name Palace. I decided it just wasn’t worth a battle. We 
needed to get marketing and advertising campaigns under 
way, and the last thing I wanted was to be forced to make a 



name change after we’d already spent millions promoting 
Trump Palace. Ironically, no sooner did I announce my 
intention to call the facility Trump’s Castle than Holiday Inns 
filed their own suit to prevent me from using the name Trump 
at all on a competitive casino. Within weeks, however, the suit 
was thrown out. 

Even before we opened Trump’s Castle, I began 
discussions with several investment banking firms about 
floating a bond issue to replace my bank financing from 
Manufacturers Hanover. I wanted to take myself off the hook 
personally, even if it meant paying a higher interest rate to do 
so. The major problem with floating a bond issue was that 
Trump’s Castle had no performance record by which anyone 
could calculate how much debt it could reasonably handle. 
Also, the Trump Organization had no track record running a 
casino, since we’d yet to manage one ourselves. 

In short, anyone who bought Trump’s Castle bonds was 
making a leap of faith. They were betting that we’d make the 
facility highly successful from the start. That was the only way 
we could meet a debt service in the range of $40 million a 
year. To put that in context, there were several existing casinos 
in town that couldn’t come close to supporting that kind of 
debt service. 

Somewhat to my surprise, several investment banking firms 
bid for the right to handle my offering. In return for a 
percentage of the total offering, they would guarantee to find 



buyers for the bonds at a specified price. Among the bidders 
was Drexel Burnham, which invented the concept of high- 
yield, junk-bond financing. But Bear Stearns, with whom Pd 
already done a lot of business, offered to raise $300 million, 
or nearly 95 percent of the total I needed. Alan Greenberg, the 
chairman, and Paul Hallingby, managing partner, were willing 
to bet big on me, and I liked that. 

To attract buyers for a speculative offering like this one, 
you generally have to offer the inducement of a high yield. 
The bonds Bear Stearns prepared carried about the same yield 
as other casinos had offered on their own financings, but 
those casinos had track records and offered far stronger 
guarantees to buyers. 

Bear Stearns did a fabulous job—I got a good deal, but so 
did the buyers. Anyone who bought the bonds is earning an 
exceptionally good return and the bonds are now selling at a 
premium. 

The one thing I wanted to avoid above all was a repetition 
of the sort of problems we had from the beginning at the 
Boardwalk facility. Rather than hire an outside general 
manager, I decided to put my wife, Ivana, in charge. I’d 
studied Atlantic City long enough to be convinced that when it 
comes to running a casino, good management skills are as 
important as specific gaming experience. She proved me right. 

By closing the deal with Hilton on June 15, we were able to 
take advantage of the high summer season. The next day, we 



opened—without a hitch—as Trump’s Castle. People packed 
the casino and we did extraordinary business, way beyond our 
expectations. On our first day we earned gross gaming 
revenues of $728,000. For the slightly less than six months 
we were open during 1985, we grossed just over $131 
million. That was better than all but three of our competitors, 
and far better than the Boardwalk facility had done for the 
same period under Harrah’s. 

The one difficulty that arose in the early months had to do 
with the clause in my contract with Hilton regarding delivery 
of the hotel in first-class condition. Under the contract, $5 
million of my purchase price was held back pending 
completion of all work. As time went on, however, we 
discovered that there were numerous outstanding problems— 
with the cooling tower, the sewage system, the computer 
system, and the fire alarm, among others. 

During the first six months we were open, my 
representatives and Hilton’s quietly negotiated about exactly 
which defects Hilton was responsible for and which they were 
not. My people felt strongly that the items not satisfactorily 
completed ran to considerably more than $5 million. On the 
other hand, I was eager to resolve the matter amicably. 

I liked Barron Hilton, I felt sorry about his experience in 
Atlantic City, and for months I was the first to defend him in 
any conversation. As a result, when the argument over who 
owed money to whom seemed to be getting nowhere, I 



decided to call Barron myself, in January 1986. 

I got him on the phone and I said that since our disputes 
hadn’t been resolved, perhaps we should sit down together 
and work out some reasonable settlement. Barron seemed 
delighted that I had called. He said that he would be in New 
York the following Monday or Tuesday and that he would 
call me then to set a date. 

Instead, when I came into my office on Monday morning I 
was served with a lawsuit from Hilton, seeking immediate 
payment of the $5 million the contract authorized us to hold 
back. I couldn’t believe it. 

The first thing I did was to call Barron again. “I don’t 
understand this,” I said. “I’ve just been served with a lawsuit, 
even though you told me we’d sit down and work this out 
together this week.” Barron totally stonewalled me. “I don’t 
know anything about a suit,” he said. He suggested that I call 
Greg Dillon, Hilton’s executive vice president. Incredibly, 
Dillon took the same position: that he knew nothing about the 
suit. Not for one minute did I believe that both Barron Hilton 
and his top deputy would be ignorant of a major lawsuit filed 
by the company. 

I recognize that lawsuits are sometimes inevitable, and I 
accept that as a reality of business. But when a person tells me 
he’s going to sit down with me, I expect him to honor that 
commitment. If we still can’t resolve the situation, that’s 
another story. From that day on I stopped defending Barron 



Hilton to anyone. 

I also immediately ordered my attorneys to file a 
counterclaim. On April 2, 1986, we did precisely that, listing 
ninety-four separate deficiencies in the Castle, along with our 
estimated cost of repair. The figure far exceeded the $5 
million we’d been authorized to hold back. Both suits are still 
pending, and I believe that we’ll ultimately be upheld. 

But for that one sour note, the story of Trump’s Castle has 
been almost entirely a positive one. Much of the credit has to 
go to Ivana. No detail escapes her. She has systematically 
hired the best people in Atlantic City at all levels—from 
croupiers to hosts to her top executives. She oversaw the 
decoration of the hotel’s public spaces, which are now quite 
spectacular. The facility is always spotless, because she’s 
meticulous even about that. And great management pays off. 
In 1986 we grossed $226 million, a record for first-year 
operations. We are projecting revenues of $310 million and a 
gross operating profit well in excess of $70 million. 

It pays to trust your instincts. 



10 

LOW RENT, HIGH STAKES 


The Showdown on Central Park South 


S ometimes by losing a battle you find a new way to win the 
war. What you need, generally, is enough time and a 
little luck. I had both at 100 Central Park South. 

This is a story about a group of tenants who fought very 
hard to keep me from tearing down the building they lived in 
and constructing a new one in its place. They succeeded. But 
by delaying me for several years during which real estate 
values soared, and by forcing me to totally change my original 
plans, they inadvertently helped me come up with a less 
expensive and more profitable project. 

Ironically, the easiest part of the whole deal was buying the 
property. Early in 1981, Louise Sunshine, my executive vice 
president at the time, came in to say she’d heard there might 
be an opportunity to buy two adjoining buildings in a great 
location. The first was 100 Central Park South, a fourteen- 
story residential building on the corner of Central Park South 
and Avenue of the Americas. The other was the Barbizon- 
Plaza, a thirty-nine-story hotel which fronted on Central Park 




and wrapped around behind 100 Central Park South, so that 
the east side of the hotel faced Avenue of the Americas. 

The buildings were owned by a syndicate that included 
Marshall Loeb of the Loeb banking family, the Lambert 
Brussels Corporation, and Henry Greenberg. By virtue of 
their location, the buildings represented one of the best pieces 
of real estate anywhere in the world. In addition to being on 
one of the city’s widest and most elegant streets, the buildings 
looked out over Central Park. 

The Barbizon-Plaza was a somewhat run-down middle- 
price hotel earning a modest profit at best. One hundred 
Central Park South was a building filled with rent-controlled 
and rent-stabilized apartments, meaning that the rent roll was 
barely sufficient to cover the operating costs of the building. 

Precisely because of these disadvantages, I was able to 
negotiate a very favorable purchase price. It helped that the 
properties hadn’t yet been put up for sale on the open market. 
As long as there were no other bidders, it was much easier for 
me to make a case that the buildings’ problems decreased their 
value. 

It probably also helped that the owners were a group of 
very wealthy men who had decided to sell not because they 
needed the money but because one of them was getting older 
and wanted to put his estate in order. I’m not permitted to say 
what I paid, but the sum wouldn’t be enough today to buy a 
vacant lot one-third the size in a far less desirable part of 



Manhattan. 

I barely looked at what the two buildings were earning. I 
was drawn to the real estate value, not the income. I was 
buying a great location at a modest price, and the way I 
looked at the deal, there was virtually no downside. Almost 
immediately I was able to get a mortgage for the buildings, 
which covered my purchase price. In the worst case, I felt, I 
could always turn around and sell at a profit. Even in bad 
times, there are buyers for first-class locations. 

Another option was to do a modest renovation of the hotel 
and raise the rents on the ground-floor stores to market levels 
as their leases came up. In addition, as tenants in rent- 
controlled and rent-stabilized apartments passed away or 
moved out of 100 Central Park South, I could raise the rents 
on those apartments. Even by doing these relatively minor 
things, I could earn at least a modest return on my investment. 

But then, “modest” isn’t my favorite word. The way to 
derive the most value from the site, I believed, was to knock 
down both buildings and to construct in their place one huge, 
beautiful modern luxury condominium tower. That posed two 
problems. The first, which I recognized from the start, is that 
it’s neither easy nor cheap to demolish a forty-four-story 
building such as the Barbizon. Still, I was certain that the 
prices we’d be able to get for new apartments in such a 
premium location would more than justify any added 
demolition costs. 



The second problem, which I didn’t fully understand until 
much later, is that it’s almost impossible to legally vacate a 
building filled with rent-controlled and rent-stabilized 
apartments. I knew that some tenants were sure to resist 
moving, but I figured time was on my side. I could afford 
delay. I was prepared to be as patient—and as persistent—as I 
needed to be. 

What I underestimated was how much the tenants stood to 
lose. I soon came to understand a simple axiom: the lower the 
rent, the bigger the apartment, and the better the location, the 
harder people will fight to keep what they have. It’s no great 
hardship to consider moving if you’re living in a mediocre 
apartment in a marginal neighborhood. Likewise, if you’re 
paying market rent for a good apartment and you can find a 
comparable one at the same price, a small financial 
inducement will often prompt you to move. 

But at 100 Central Park South, many tenants were fighting 
to protect the ultimate in New York real estate: beautiful 
apartments with high ceilings, fireplaces, and great views—at 
an unbeatable location. Most important, with rent control and 
rent stabilization, they were enjoying one of the great windfall 
subsidies in the free world. On the open market, their 
apartments would have rented for as much as ten times what 
they were paying. If I’d been a tenant at 100 Central Park 
South, I’d have led the fight against anyone who tried to get 
me to move. 



Unfortunately, rent control is a disaster for all but the 
privileged minority who are protected by it. As much as any 
other single factor, rent control is responsible for the desperate 
housing crisis that has plagued New York City for the past 
twenty years. 

Like a lot of failed government programs, rent control grew 
out of a decent idea that ended up achieving exactly the 
opposite of its intended effect. Rent control began as a 
temporary federal policy in 1943. The government froze rent 
on every apartment in America as a way to provide affordable 
housing for returning veterans. Having achieved that, the law 
was rescinded in 1948. But New York City adopted its own 
rent control law in 1962. Under the city statute, any dwelling 
built before 1947 was subject to rent control. In effect, the city 
created an inalienable right for five million New Yorkers— 
namely, low-price housing. 

It sounds wonderful. The only problem was that the city 
had no intention of underwriting it. Instead, they forced 
landlords to subsidize tenants. The costs of fuel, labor, and 
maintenance rose steadily, but the city refused to let landlords 
raise their rents to keep pace with inflation, much less the 
market itself. 

When landlords simply couldn’t make ends meet anymore, 
they began abandoning their buildings. Between 1960 and 
1976, approximately 300,000 housing units in New York 
were abandoned. The first apartments to go, either by 



abandonment or arson, were the ones in the worst 
neighborhoods. Apartments in these buildings had the lowest 
rents. Landlords therefore earned the smallest profit margins 
and were least able to absorb rising costs. The other victims 
were the poor tenants who had been living in these buildings. 
Whole neighborhoods in the South Bronx and Brooklyn 
turned into ghost towns. The city, in turn, lost hundreds of 
millions of dollars in real estate taxes that landlords stopped 
paying once they’d abandoned their buildings. 

Perhaps the worst thing about rent control is that it stopped 
protecting the people who needed it the most. The best rent- 
controlled apartments have always been prized and difficult to 
come by, and people with power and money have always had 
an inside track on them. During the past year, an independent 
researcher and writer, William Tucker, has set out to 
document particularly egregious examples. He cites buildings 
such as one on Central Park West at 73rd Street. 
Magnificently designed, it has huge apartments, wonderful 
detailing, a beautiful double-height marble lobby, and, of 
course, gorgeous views. It’s no surprise that people with 
money and taste would want to live there. Mia Farrow, for 
example, has ten rooms overlooking the park. She pays about 
$2,000 a month for an apartment that might rent for upward 
of $10,000 a month on the open market. Carly Simon, the 
singer and songwriter, lives in the same building and pays 
about $2,200 a month for her ten rooms overlooking the park. 

Down the street, Tucker found that Suzanne Farrell of the 



New York City Ballet has a fourteen-room duplex near 
Lincoln Center, for which she pays under $1,000 a month. 
William Vanden Heuvel, a very prominent attorney who 
served as ambassador to the United Nations under Jimmy 
Carter, pays less than $650 a month for a six-room apartment 
in a terrific building on East 72nd Street near Fifth Avenue. 
Alistair Cooke, the TV personality, pays about $1,100 for an 
eight-room apartment on Fifth Avenue. William Shawn, 
former editor of The New Yorker, lives in the same building 
and pays $1,000 a month for his eight rooms. 

The most notorious example of all may be Ed Koch, the 
mayor of New York. Koch has a very nice three-room rent- 
controlled apartment with a terrace in a beautiful part of 
Greenwich Village. He pays $350 a month—perhaps one fifth 
what it’s worth. The worst thing, though, is that Koch doesn’t 
even live in his rent-controlled apartment. He lives in Gracie 
Mansion, the official residence of the mayor. 

Unlike most developers, I don’t advocate eliminating rent 
control. I just think there ought to be a means test for anyone 
living in a rent-controlled apartment. People below a certain 
income would be permitted to keep their apartments at their 
current rent. People with incomes above a certain sum would 
be given a choice between paying a proportionally higher rent 
for their apartments or moving somewhere else. 

The situation at 100 Central Park South is a perfect 
illustration. Soon after I purchased the building, I did some 



research into the financial status of the tenants. What I 
discovered was fascinating but not surprising. There are three 
distinct groups. The first, who live in the largest apartments, 
overlooking the park, on the higher floors, are generally 
successful, wealthy, and in some cases quite prominent. 

Fashion designer Arnold Scaasi, for example, has a six- 
room duplex facing the park, for which he is paying $985 a 
month—about what it costs to rent a one-room studio at 
market rates. Angelo DeSapio, another wealthy tenant and an 
architect of some eminence, has the entire seventh floor facing 
the park—nine rooms for a rent of $1,600 a month. Still 
another tenant owns a beautiful brownstone on 63rd Street 
worth at least $5 million but also has four combined 
apartments at 100 Central Park South, with fabulous views of 
the park from the thirteenth floor and a rent under $2,500 a 
month. All of these apartments could rent for many times what 
the current wealthy occupants are paying. 

The second group of tenants are what I’d call the yuppies: 
younger professional people—stockbrokers and journalists 
and attorneys. While not necessarily millionaires, these people 
are certainly affluent. A good number of them occupy one- 
and two-bedroom apartments facing the park. 

The third group of tenants live in smaller apartments with 
tiny kitchens and windows facing the court. Not surprisingly, 
these people are generally of modest means. A number of 
them are elderly, living on social security. Their rents are 



below market, but not nearly to the degree of their wealthier 
neighbors in the front apartments. A comparable studio in the 
neighborhood might rent for twice what most of these tenants 
are now paying. 

The leader of the tenants, John Moore, was a man who 
didn’t quite fit into any group. In his early forties, this 
gentleman came from a family of money and social standing. 
His grandfather was a major stockholder in Tiffany & 
Company before it was bought by Walter Hoving, but he 
himself had not been very successful. I’ve always been 
convinced that leading the tenants gave him a way to feel 
useful and important. Of course, he also had something very 
valuable to protect: a beautiful two-bedroom park-view 
apartment for which he paid a very modest rent. 

Vacating the Barbizon-Plaza was easy. All I had to do was 
stop renting hotel rooms. Before I gave up that income, 
however, I wanted to vacate 100 Central Park South too. 
Unfortunately, I made a very critical mistake right at the start: 
I should have gotten involved myself. That’s what I’d always 
done in the past, and that’s what always worked for me. But 
frankly, convincing tenants to move wasn’t the kind of work I 
relished. Instead, I decided to hire a company that specialized 
in relocating tenants. Citadel Management was recommended 
to me by several top executives at well-known companies 
who’d used the firm and vouched for its reputation. I wasn’t 
looking for tough guys. This was a high-visibility location, 
and a lot of people were gunning for Donald Trump already. 



The last thing I needed was to create controversy. 

My original plan was very straightforward. We’d let the 
tenants at 100 Central Park South know that we intended to 
eventually demolish the building, along with the Barbizon 
next door. Then we’d offer them help in finding suitable new 
apartments, as well as cash incentives to move. 

Very quickly, however, the tenants got organized. They 
formed a tenants’ association and decided to hire a law firm to 
represent them. Cost was no object. The wealthiest tenants had 
the most money to lose, and they were more than willing to 
underwrite any attorney fees. Several agreed to contribute as 
much as $8,000 a year to the cause. That was cheap, after all, 
compared with the $10,000 a month they might have to pay 
for a comparable apartment elsewhere. 

The firm that the tenants chose had been somewhat 
successful representing tenants facing eviction. They made a 
better living than most landlord attorneys. Their approach was 
to resist eviction on every front and tie things up in court for 
as long as possible, perhaps hoping to make as big a 
settlement as possible with the landlord. 

I felt confident that I had every legal right to vacate 100 
Central Park South for the purpose of building a new and 
larger building in its place. To evict the tenants who lived in 
non-rent-controlled apartments, all I had to show was my 
plans to demolish the building and put up a new one in its 
place. To evict the tenants under rent control, I had to meet 



stricter standards but none that seemed insurmountable. 

First, I had to demonstrate that my new building would 
provide at least 20 percent more housing units than the old 
one. That was easy enough, since it was obviously in my 
interest financially to put up a bigger building. Second, I had 
to prove that the old building was earning a profit, after 
expenses, of less than 8.5 percent of its assessed value. By 
virtue of rent control, the assessment was a paltry $1.5 
million, meaning the city got almost no taxes from the 
building. And although I wasn’t permitted to include my debt 
service as part of my expenses, the building still didn’t come 
close to earning an 8.5 percent margin. If my debt service was 
included, I was actually losing a substantial amount of money. 
Either way, if the city ruled purely on the merits, I was 
convinced they’d have to approve our demolition application 
and order any remaining tenants out. 

When Citadel took over management of the building early 
in 1981, I gave them two instructions: the first was to try to 
find new apartments for as many tenants as possible; the 
second was to continue to provide all essential services to the 
tenants. 

It happens to be very easy to vacate a building if, like so 
many landlords, you don’t mind being a bad guy. When these 
landlords buy buildings they intend to vacate, they use 
corporate names that are difficult to trace. Then they hire 
thugs to come in with sledgehammers and smash up the 



boiler, rip out the stairways, and create floods by cutting holes 
in pipes. They import truckloads of junkies, prostitutes, and 
thieves and move them into vacant apartments to terrorize 
holdout tenants. 

That’s what I call harassment. I wouldn’t have done that 
sort of thing for moral reasons, nor would I have done it for 
practical reasons. I buy buildings in my own name, and I have 
a reputation to uphold. 

The tenants at 100 Central Park South got an abundance of 
heat and plenty of hot water. I made sure to deal with the 
building’s outstanding violations, however modest, even 
though you’ll find dozens of violations in elegant buildings all 
over the Upper East Side. The last thing I wanted was to give 
these tenants legitimate grounds for opposing me. 

What I didn’t do was run 100 Central Park South as if it 
were a white-glove Park Avenue building. The rent roll, 
which barely covered my basic expenses, simply couldn’t 
support luxuries. Nor did tenants paying tiny below-market 
rents have any right to expect them. For example, when we 
took over, there was a telephone in the lobby—not a pay 
telephone but a free telephone. It was supposed to be for 
emergencies. It turned out that some tenants were using the 
phone to call their friends in Gstaad and St. Moritz. 

The doormen were taken out of their fancy uniforms. That 
saved a small fortune in dry-cleaning bills. To ensure security, 
the doormen stopped leaving the door to meet tenants halfway 



down the street to carry their packages. High-wattage lights in 
the hallways were replaced with lower-wattage bulbs, because, 
as any cost-conscious landlord will tell you, that alone saves 
many thousand dollars a year in electric bills. 

What we didn’t anticipate was that the tenants would try to 
use the fact that we were running the building more efficiently 
as evidence that we were harassing them and making their 
lives intolerable. In a way it was fitting. We were talking about 
at least some people, after all, for whom hardship is not being 
able to get a table on thirty minutes’ notice at Le Cirque. If 
there’s one thing I’ve learned about the rich, it’s that they 
have a very low threshold for even the mildest discomfort. 

The tenants even figured out a way to turn our relocation 
offer into evidence of harassment. We were, they claimed, 
using “persistent and intense pressure” to get people to move. 
In reality, each tenant was approached with an offer of help in 
relocation. If our offer was turned down—which was usually 
the case, since the tenants had agreed to oppose us on 
everything—that was the end of it. Some tenants even told us 
that they had been warned by the tenants’ committee not to 
consider our offer. The irony is that we might well have been 
able to offer better alternatives to the tenants who lived in the 
less-desirable apartments. 

The one thing I can’t deny is that claiming harassment was a 
clever tactic. Harassment is a virtual buzzword in New York. 
It prompts instant images of vicious landlords and victimized 



tenants. If the tenants’ attorney could somehow convince a 
sympathetic jury—probably tenants themselves—that a 
harassment case had merit, we’d automatically be denied our 
demolition application. The tenants of 100 Central Park South 
wouldn’t have to move. In the meantime, they could generate 
plenty of negative press about me merely by alleging that I 
was harassing them. The fact that I denied the charges would 
only make it a juicier story. 

Unfortunately, we made several moves that played right 
into the tenants’ hands. For example, we decided to bring 
eviction proceedings against any tenant at 100 Central Park 
South who was in significant arrears on his rent, or who 
wasn’t using the apartment as a primary residence, as required 
by law. Landlords all over the city bring these proceedings 
every day. They are perfectly legitimate, and we won in 
several instances. 

Stupidly, we also brought several cases that were flawed. In 
one, for example, we claimed that a tenant hadn’t paid his 
rent. It turned out he had his canceled check as evidence, and 
the payment simply hadn’t been recorded in Citadel’s books. 
When they realized the error, they told the tenant they’d drop 
the action if he produced the check. By then, however, the 
tenants’ lawyer saw a perfect opportunity to further 
demonstrate their case. The tenant refused to produce the 
check, and obviously we lost this case in court. In another 
situation, we failed to give a tenant sufficient legal notice of an 
impending eviction proceeding. Our case was legitimate, but 



the court ruled that we should have known the law had been 
changed recently to require longer notice. 

Another mistake was tinning-up the windows of vacant 
apartments. It happens to be exactly what the city does with its 
own vacant apartments all over the city to protect them from 
vandalism. But then the city doesn’t own buildings on Central 
Park South. It would have been smarter—and it would have 
saved us a lot of trouble—if we’d come up with a nicer way to 
deal with the windows from the start. 

Nothing generated as much controversy as my offer to 
provide housing for the homeless at 100 Central Park South. 
By the summer of 1982—about a year after I took over the 
building—the problem of the homeless in New York was 
beginning to get a lot of attention. One morning, after passing 
several homeless people sleeping on benches in Central Park, I 
got an idea. 

I had more than a dozen vacant apartments at 100 Central 
Park South. Because I still planned to demolish the building, I 
had no intention of filling the apartments with permanent 
tenants. Why not, I thought, offer them to the city for use by 
the homeless, on a temporary basis? I’m not going to pretend 
that it bothered me to imagine the very wealthy tenants of 100 
Central Park South having to live alongside people less 
fortunate than themselves for a while. At the same time, I 
genuinely felt it was a shame not to make use of a few vacant 
apartments when the streets were filled with homeless people. 



Almost immediately, the columnists and editorial writers 
criticized my offer. City officials, sensing a potential 
controversy, told me “No, thanks.” It didn’t help make my 
offer seem sincere when one columnist wrote a story saying 
that I’d refused a subsequent plea by a group representing 
Polish refugees seeking to use the apartments. In fact, by then 
I’d had second thoughts about the whole concept. My 
attorneys had researched the situation and determined that if I 
permitted anyone to move into the apartments—even on a 
temporary basis—I’d have a very hard time ever getting them 
out legally. That was all I needed. 

Saying so publicly, however, might just have made a bad 
situation worse. Instead, I said nothing, which wasn’t much 
better. It was not one of my best experiences with the media, 
but it taught me something. You don’t act on an impulse— 
even a charitable one—unless you’ve considered the 
downside. 

Early in 1984, a group of tenants went to the state and 
officially filed charges of harassment. Virtually all of the 
complaints were trivial, but I told my people to take care of 
every one nonetheless. Even that wasn’t enough. In January 
1985, the state agreed to consider the tenants’ charges of 
harassment. Obviously, we’d made our share of mistakes 
early on, but none had caused anyone real hardship. In my 
view, the tenants’ tactics were a clever form of reverse 
harassment. They knew there had been no real harassment. 
The case instead was a ploy to hold on to their bargain 



apartments—or at the very least to exact a rich settlement from 
me. 

The tenants’ committee orchestrated the campaign. Nearly 
fifty tenants were part of the harassment action, and all of 
them submitted identical boilerplate lists of complaints. They 
even ended their letters with the same phrase: “Donald Trump 
is a modern-day Scrooge.” When my attorneys did a little 
further checking, they found out something very interesting. 
Several of the wealthier tenants had been submitting the same 
sort of complaints to city agencies for the past ten, twenty, and 
even thirty years, invariably accompanied by a request for a 
reduction in rent. The tenants of 100 Central Park South were 
world experts in the art of living very high for very little. 

What the tenants didn’t count on is that I’m not one of those 
landlords who roll over to avoid bad publicity or save a few 
bucks—particularly when I think the charges are unfair. 
Fighting back might run up my legal bills and even make me 
rethink my strategy. But the one thing I wasn’t about to do 
was allow myself to be blackmailed into a ridiculous 
settlement. 

A couple of things did go my way. The most important was 
the value of New York real estate. It had risen steadily every 
year since 1974, but in early 1981, about the time I bought the 
two buildings on Central Park South, it finally took a pause. 
Over the next two years, during which I’d originally hoped to 
get my new building finished, the market actually declined. A 



lot of people thought the big boom was over. 

In 1984, however, the market picked up again strongly. The 
economics were staggering. In the fall of 1981, the average 
price per room for a cooperative reached as high as $93,000. 
By early 1983, it dropped as low as $67,000. But by January 
1985—when my confrontation with the tenants was reaching 
a head—the average price per room had jumped up to 
$124,000. In short, while the tenants were doing all they 
could to delay me, New York real estate was nearly doubling 
in value. 

Even by building only on the Barbizon site—which I’d 
decided was the easiest solution—I’d earn more than if I’d 
developed the entire site two years earlier. In addition, we now 
had numerous vacant apartments at 100 Central Park South, 
and with time the number could only rise. The law permitted 
us to rent some vacant apartments at market rates. In effect, I 
was sitting on gold. 

The other thing that happened during this period is that 
architectural tastes and trends began to shift. At the time I 
purchased the buildings on Central Park South, the style in 
skyscrapers was still very much the sleek, highly modern glass 
tower. Trump Tower was perhaps the ultimate example. 
Because that design was so well received and so successful, it 
seemed to me only logical to design a similarly sleek modern 
building on the Central Park South site. 

By 1984, however, I sensed a new wave in architecture was 



setting in—and it was the wave of the old. The people who 
buy top-line apartments in New York tend to be extremely 
fashion-conscious, in architecture as in everything else. I’m a 
practical man. If an older look is what people want, that’s 
what I’m going to provide. I’m not interested in buildings that 
don’t sell. Early in 1985, I commissioned an architect to 
design a new building for the Barbizon-Plaza site—but one 
that incorporated older, classical elements compatible with 100 
Central Park South. 

In truth, my heart wasn’t totally in it. I’d never been a big 
fan of postmodernism, the architectural movement that first 
mixed classical elements with modern design. To me, it often 
represents the worst of both worlds. The materials and the 
craftsmanship are rarely first-class because most builders 
won’t pay what that requires, and the classical elements in 
postmodern designs almost always look imitative. At the same 
time, these elements interfere with the sleek look of the best 
modern design. 

When my architect showed up with his model for an older- 
looking building on the Barbizon site, the design was not the 
first thing that caught my eye. The new building, I noticed, 
was much smaller than the one it was intended to replace. 
What, I asked the architect, was this all about? 

“It’s the zoning,” he explained. “When the Barbizon was 
built, there were no restrictions on size. Now that the zoning is 
so much stricter, it’s no longer permissible to build such a 



large building on that site.” 

“Do you mean,” I said, “that if I totally gut and rebuild the 
inside, and leave only the fagade and the steel frame intact, 
that is okay? But if I tear down the old building I have to 
replace it with a much smaller and less dramatic new one?” 

And he said, “Yes, Mr. Trump, that is correct.” 

“If that’s the case,” I said, “then why should we knock 
down an old building to build a new one that will be less than 
half the size, won’t look nearly as good as the old one, and 
will cost a lot more?” 

“It’s simple, Mr. Trump,” he said. “The reason is that the 
windows in the Barbizon are much too small for a luxury 
residential building.” 

The solution was obvious: leave the building intact, but cut 
out bigger openings and enlarge the windows. 

Coincidentally, my own tastes were changing. I was 
beginning to appreciate the detailing and elegance of certain 
great older buildings. Among them were the two buildings I 
owned on Central Park South. I also began to realize how 
much a part of the Central Park South skyline these buildings 
were. 

Our preliminary estimate for ripping down the Barbizon 
and putting up a new structure in its place was $250 million. 
When we costed out the job of gutting and rebuilding the 
interior and enlarging all the windows, we came up with an 



estimate of $100 million for the entire job. The cost of trying 
to replicate my favorite feature of the Barbizon—the 
magnificent stone crown at its top—was $10 million alone. 
Even at that, it would never have matched the original. 
Renovating wasn’t only cost effective, it was also a better 
design decision. 

One last factor helped turn the whole deal around. For 
several years, I’d been trying to purchase the St. Moritz Hotel, 
directly across the street from 100 Central Park South. The 
sellers were Harry Helmsley and Lawrence Wien, two of the 
greatest real estate men ever. The problem had always been 
cost. They wanted a huge price for the hotel, which I believed 
was more than its earnings justified. Several times they made 
deals with other buyers, presumably for what they were 
seeking, only to have the agreements unravel before closing. 
Time and again I’ve seen that happen with people who offer a 
top price for a property. Their eyes prove bigger than their 
pocketbooks, and they end up backing out. 

After watching this process repeat itself several times, I 
called Harry Helmsley and said, “I’d very much like to buy 
the St. Moritz, and in my case you know the deal will go 
through, but I don’t want to pay the price you have in mind. 
And he said, “Well, what you’re offering is too low. We 
negotiated back and forth, and finally we settled on a price 
that I think was fair, based on the hotel’s earnings. 

But I had an ace in the hole: the 1,400-room Barbizon-Plaza 



one door up the street. I hadn’t told anyone, but my plan was 
to close down the Barbizon as soon as I purchased the St. 
Moritz. The logic was simple. When I closed the Barbizon, I 
could move Charles Frowenfeld, a great hotel manager, and 
all of his best people over to the St. Moritz. In addition, many 
of the Barbizon’s customers would inevitably follow, since the 
St. Moritz was the only otiter moderate-price hotel on Central 
Park South. While I’d obviously lose some customers when I 
closed down the Barbizon, I’d pick up a lot of them at the St. 
Moritz. At the very least, I figured, occupancy and revenues at 
the St. Moritz would increase by 25 percent virtually 
overnight. 

The banks apparently agreed. When I went seeking 
financing for the purchase, I was able to get an immediate 
commitment for $6 million more than my purchase price. In 
short, I was able to buy the St. Moritz without putting up any 
money at all—and I ended up with $6 million to put in my 
pocket. When we got to closing, Harry Helmsley was leafing 
through the papers and he noticed the size of my mortgage. 
He didn’t look thrilled. But the sale was also a great deal for 
Harry and Larry. After all, they’d paid practically nothing to 
purchase the hotel years earlier. 

I took over the St. Moritz in September 1985 and closed the 
Barbizon soon after. During the first year, business at the St. 
Moritz increased by 31 percent, or slightly more than I’d 
predicted. But by virtue of more efficient management, the 
margin of profit nearly quadrupled. 



The one remaining issue I faced was the harassment suit at 
100 Central Park South. Because I no longer intended to 
vacate and raze the building, a harassment finding no longer 
threatened my plans. Still, several of my lawyers urged me to 
settle the case purely to resolve an unpleasant situation. 
Specifically, they suggested I work out a deal under which the 
tenants would drop their harassment suit in return for my 
selling them the building outright for $10 million. 

On its face, the deal wasn’t a bad one for me. Based on my 
original purchase price, I stood to earn a very substantial 
profit by selling 100 Central Park South for $10 million. But 
in the end I said no. Temperamentally, I just couldn’t accept 
the idea that the tenants were using harassment charges as a 
lever against me so that they could buy a building for less than 
market value. This is where the tenants and their lawyers 
caused themselves the loss of a tremendous windfall. Today in 
New York almost everyone wants to buy their apartments. 

Meanwhile the harassment case stalled in the courts. A state 
supreme court judge ruled in August 1985 that there was no 
clear evidence that harassment had occurred. In December 
1986, the appellate division of the state supreme court 
unanimously upheld the lower court’s ruling. 

The lawyers kept talking settlement. Finally, late in 1986, 
nearly all the tenants agreed to drop any further claims against 
me. Since I no longer planned to demolish the building 
anyway, I agreed to drop all eviction proceedings and to give 



them new leases on their apartments. I also agreed to excuse 
from three months’ rent every tenant who was party to the 
agreement, and in return, all tenants who’d been withholding 
rent—in some cases for as long as a year—agreed to pay up. 
The total figure exceeded $150,000. 

While the state dropped its case, the city insisted that it 
intended to continue pursuing the harassment case against me. 
Even John Moore, the leader of the tenants’ group, was 
surprised. For the city to push the case, he said to a reporter, 
“is like beating the horse after the horse has come back to the 
barn.” The real victims were the taxpayers. The city was 
choosing to spend money and manpower on a nonissue that 
had been resolved—at a time when many important issues had 
not. It is my opinion that this case continues purely because I 
beat the hell out of Ed Koch on the Trump Tower tax 
abatement and embarrassed him with Wollman Rink. 

In the meantime, I renamed the Barbizon-Plaza Trump Parc, 
and began my renovation. One of the first things I did was to 
hire a company called Holes, Inc. Talk about surreal 
specialization. These people did nothing but cut holes for a 
living. Fortunately, they did it very well. In a matter of weeks, 
they’d turned the Barbizon’s tiny windows into huge picture- 
window openings. Those openings alone were immensely 
valuable, because a great view is worth a small fortune. 

In a market about to be flooded with new buildings, we had 
something unique to offer: the best of the old and the new. 



The detail and ornamentation of the building’s exterior 
remained, including the crown. So did features such as the 
twelve-foot ceilings in the apartments, which no developer 
would even consider in a new building, because the cost is 
simply too great. At the same time, the new construction gave 
the building several advantages over most older ones: new 
plumbing, smooth walls, modern wiring, fast elevators—and, 
of course, huge Thermopane windows. 

The building is scheduled to be completed in the fall of 
1987, but we put the apartments on the market in November 
1986. Within eight months, we’d sold 80 percent—nearly 270 
apartments. One individual bought seven apartments, for a 
total of $20 million. When the building sells out—in all 
likelihood before a single person has moved in—we’ll have 
grossed in excess of $240 million. And that’s before I do 
anything with 100 Central Park South and the stores along the 
street. 

All’s well that ends well. The tenants at 100 Central Park 
South kept their apartments, Central Park South retained two 
of its landmark buildings, and the city will soon be earning far 
greater taxes from the property than ever before. As for me, 
I’ll ultimately earn a profit of more than $100 million on a 
deal that many people thought would turn out to be a total 
loser. And it was largely because the tenants managed to delay 


me. 



11 

LONG SHOT 


The Spring and Fall of the USFL 


A ll my life I’ve believed in paying for the best. But when it 
came to the United States Football League, I decided to 
go a different route entirely. 

By the time I bought the New Jersey Generals in the fall of 
1983, the league was already failing badly. It had lost nearly 
$30 million. The Generals alone, under the ownership of an 
Oklahoma oilman named J. Walter Duncan, had lost more 
than $2 million, not to mention nearly every game they’d 
played. In real estate terms, I was buying the South Bronx 
instead of Fifth Avenue and 57th Street. 

But I didn’t look at the Generals as a typical deal. I viewed 
it instead as a long shot, a lark that I could afford to take. I’ve 
always been a football fan. I love sports, and having my own 
team seemed the realization of a great fantasy. I also liked the 
idea of taking on the NFL, a smug, self-satisfied monopoly 
that I believed was highly vulnerable to an aggressive 
competitor. 




As long shots go, I liked the odds on the USFL. My initial 
investment was relatively small, and the potential rewards 
were quite great. For less than $6 million, contingent on the 
league’s continuing—compared with the $70 million an NFL 
franchise might cost—I was able to purchase a professional 
football team in one of the greatest areas in the world. If I 
could help turn the team and the league around, I stood to earn 
back many times my initial investment. At the very least, I 
would have a lot of fun trying. 

The main problems with the USFL seemed fairly clear-cut 
and not all that difficult to remedy. The first was that the 
league was playing its games in the spring. Sports have their 
seasons, and fans like their football in the fall. The television 
networks, which essentially underwrite professional sports, 
won’t pay large sums for the rights to televise spring football. 
At the time I bought the Generals, ABC was paying $1 million 
a year for exclusive network rights to the USFL spring 
schedule. Meanwhile, the three networks together were paying 
a staggering $359 million a year for rights to the NFL fall 
games. The first thing the USFL had to do was move to the 
fall. 

The second challenge was to build a first-class product. To 
me, that meant spending whatever money it took to sign top 
players, promote our teams, and create the sort of excitement 
that would make us a legitimate competitor for the NFL’s fans 
and TV dollars. 



Two leagues had been launched previously in competition 
with the NFL, and the outcome in each case was highly 
instructive. The American Football League was formed in 
1962 by eight very wealthy entrepreneurial men. They signed 
top players and absorbed substantial losses in the service of 
building the league’s credibility during the early years. By 
1966, the AFL had signed away dozens of the NFL’s best 
players and was widely seen as the more exciting of the two 
leagues. With the AFL raids escalating, NFL commissioner 
Pete Rozelle surrendered. He suggested a merger of the two 
leagues, and today those original AFL teams are among the 
NFL’s most successful franchises. But even without a merger, 
the AFL would have prospered. 

The other venture that tried to compete with the NFL was 
the World Football League. It was launched in 1973, but by 
men of much less wealth and more limited vision. In contrast 
to their AFL counterparts, the WFL owners signed very few 
name players, placed their franchises in smaller cities, and 
failed to attract any kind of television contract. Within two 
years, the WFL was bankrupt. Its founders didn’t lose a 
fortune—but only because they didn’t invest a fortune. 

I foresaw two possible outcomes if we moved the USFL to 
the fall and began to build quality teams, and both of them 
were potentially good. The first was that at least one of the 
three networks would offer us a substantial fall television 
contract, which would help us continue to build an even 
stronger league fully competitive with the NFL. The second 



was that the three networks, all fearful of alienating the 
monopoly NFL, would refuse to give us a fall television 
contract, no matter how strong a product we had to offer. In 
that case, I believed, we’d have strong grounds for an antitrust 
case against the NFL. 

If we went the latter route, obviously we could lose, and 
then our league would be dead. But I believed the more likely 
outcome was some sort of victory. If the suit went to a jury 
and we were awarded reasonable damages—particularly given 
the fact that any damage award is trebled in an antitrust case— 
we’d have the financial base we needed. Another possibility 
was that the NFL, anticipating a costly and humiliating court 
defeat, would offer some sort of settlement, much as they’d 
done twenty years earlier with the AFL. 

I made no secret of my views. Two years later, the NFL 
would try to claim in court that my plan to move our league’s 
season to the fall was somehow secret and sinister. In fact, 
within days of taking over the Generals, I told any reporter 
who called me exactly how I felt. Then, on October 18, 1983, 
a month after purchasing the Generals, I attended my first 
owners meeting in Houston, Texas. I wasn’t shy there, either. 

When my turn came to address my fellow owners, I stood 
up and explained that I hadn’t bought into the USFL to be a 
minor-league owner playing in the off-season of spring. I 
pointed out that the greatest number of fans, and by far the 
biggest pool of network television dollars, were concentrated 



in the fall. I reminded my fellow owners that because the NFL 
had just gone through a long, bitter players’ strike the past 
fall, many fans were feeling restless and alienated. And 
finally, I argued that we had a chance to put the NFL even 
further on the defensive by moving aggressively to sign top 
NFL players whose contracts were coming up, as well as the 
best graduating college players. 

If there was a single key miscalculation I made with the 
USFL, it was evaluating the strength of my fellow owners. In 
any partnership, you’re only as strong as your weakest link. 
Several of my fellow USFL owners were strong as hell 
financially and psychologically. Among them were Michigan 
Panthers owner A1 Taubman and Philadelphia Stars owner 
Myles Tanenbaum, both of whom, coincidentally, had made 
their personal fortunes building shopping centers, as well as 
Memphis Showboats owner Billy Dunavaut and Jacksonville 
Bulls owner Fred Bullard. 

Unfortunately, I quickly discovered that a number of USFL 
owners lacked the financial resources and the competitive 
vision to build the sort of top-quality league necessary to 
defeat the NFL. They shuddered at the prospect of any direct 
confrontation with the NFL, they were quite content to play in 
obscurity in the spring, and they spent much more time 
thinking about ways to keep their costs down than about how 
to build the league up. 

My most immediate priority was the team I’d just 



purchased. The New Jersey Generals were a disaster. They’d 
just come off a season in which they’d won only four games 
and lost fourteen. The team had one great athlete and 
superstar, Herschel Walker, the Heisman Trophy running 
back from Georgia, but even Herschel had yet to play near his 
potential. Meanwhile, although the Generals had just 
completed a full season of playing professional football across 
the river from the media capital of the world, they had 
attracted virtually no press attention and very few fans. 

The best way to turn that around was to turn the Generals 
around. Fans like winners. They come to watch stars—great, 
exciting players who do great, exciting things. Herschel was 
obviously one, but in football, the team rises or falls on the 
quarterback. Nothing helped promote the AFL—and the New 
York Jets—as much as the signing of a University of Alabama 
quarterback named Joe Namath, for a then-unprecedented 
$400,000 a year. Namath eventually led the Jets and the AFL 
to their first Superbowl victory. But even before that, he 
earned his salary simply because he became the AFL’s most 
colorful, charismatic drawing card. 

The first player I went after was Brian Sipe, the quarterback 
for the Cleveland Browns. Sipe had been the NFL’s most 
valuable player a couple of seasons earlier, and he was a bona 
fide superstar. He was also in the option year of his contract, 
meaning that he’d be available in a matter of months. Getting 
Sipe was a chance to help the Generals and the USFL and 
simultaneously to hurt the NFL. The negotiations proved to be 



long and difficult, but on December 27, 1983, I held a press 
conference to announce we’d signed Sipe to a long-term 
$800,000-a-year contract with the Generals. 

By the time we got Sipe, we’d already lured away several 
other top NFL players. The first was Gary Barbaro, an All-Pro 
free safety from the Kansas City Chiefs, whom we signed on 
November 5. Signing Barbaro had a side benefit: it showed 
other NFL players that we were serious about paying top 
dollar to build a top team. On November 28 we signed Kerry 
Justin, who’d been a starting cornerback for the Seattle 
Seahawks. In December we signed a pair of linebackers from 
the Super Bowl-champion San Francisco Forty-niners, Willie 
Harper and Bobby Leopold. To protect Sipe, we signed a 
veteran offensive guard from Cincinnati named Dave Lapham. 

Another negotiation that got some attention during that 
period was the one I conducted with Don Shula, coach of the 
Miami Dolphins. Shula was one of the most successful 
coaches in NFL history, but he was also vastly underpaid. I 
immediately offered Shula far more than he’d been earning. I 
was willing to meet most of his demands, but when he threw 
in a request for an apartment in Trump Tower, I drew the line. 
I can afford to buy football teams in part because I don’t give 
away apartments. Still, the negotiation ended up helping 
Shula: it forced the Dolphins to renegotiate his contract at a far 
higher salary, which he certainly deserved. 

We got the most attention of all for signing Lawrence 



Taylor, the All-Pro linebacker for the New York Giants and 
perhaps the best all-around player in the NFL. On December 
31, 1983, we announced that Taylor had signed a four-year 
contract with the Generals, for a total of $3.25 million. The 
catch was that it wouldn’t take effect until 1988, when his 
contract with the Giants expired. In a way, that was even 
better than getting him immediately. By signing a player of 
Taylor’s stature to a “futures” contract, we were serving notice 
on the NFL that none of their players—not even those under 
multiyear contracts—were beyond our reach. 

As it turned out, when Taylor’s deal was announced the 
Giants went nuts. Two weeks later, on January 17, 1984, they 
offered him a six-year $6.55 million extension of his contract. 
In effect, I forced the Giants to increase Taylor’s salary by $3 
million just to prevent him from departing three years down 
the road. Then, in return for my letting Taylor out of his 
Generals contract, the Giants agreed to pay me a penalty fee of 
$750,000. 

My aggressiveness in signing NFL players also seemed to 
inspire other USFL owners. The second USFL draft was held 
on January 4, 1984. The Pittsburgh franchise drafted Heisman 
Trophy-winner Mike Rozier from Nebraska and signed him 
five days later. The team’s season-ticket sales immediately 
jumped from 6,000 to 20,000. Brigham Young quarterback 
Steve Young, a college superstar, signed a multimillion-dollar 
contract with the USFL’s Los Angeles Express. Don 
Klosterman, the president of the LA Express, also managed to 



sign fourteen other draft picks, every one of whom was a 
good NFL prospect. Altogether, USFL teams signed nearly 
half of the top college players we went after. Sports Illustrated 
posed the obvious question in an article about the success of 
our draft: “Flow many more players like Rozier and Young 
can the NFL afford to lose?” 

When our owners met in New Orleans on January 17, I 
pushed again to move our season to the fall. Given our 
success in luring NFL players and signing top college 
prospects, the time couldn’t have been better. I suggested a 
fall vote right then and there, but the reluctant owners 
managed to vote through a compromise instead: appointing a 
long-range planning committee to study the spring-fall 
question. To me, committees are what insecure people create 
in order to put off making hard decisions. But at least I’d 
gotten the fall question on the table as a serious issue. I was 
made a member of the new committee and I was confident I’d 
ultimately persuade a majority of owners that the fall was our 
best hope. 

Meanwhile, the NFL was beginning to run scared. The best 
evidence was a meeting the league held in Cambridge, 
Massachusetts, in February 1984 to discuss its future—and 
specifically the threat of the USFL. The main seminar—which 
we didn’t learn about until much later—was conducted by a 
highly respected Harvard Business School professor named 
Michael Porter, who had prepared a forty-seven-page 
document entitled “The USFL vs. the NFL.” Some sixty-five 



NFL executives attended his presentation, among them Jack 
Donlan, executive director of the NFL management council, 
as well as numerous team owners. 

Porter bluntly outlined a multipart plan for declaring total 
war on our league, by employing numerous anticompetitive 
strategies. His two-and-a-half-hour presentation was divided 
into sections such as “Offensive Strategies,” “Guerrilla 
Warfare” and “The Art of War—China 500 b.c.” Porter’s 
suggestions included trying to “dissuade” ABC from 
continuing even its spring television contract with the USFL; 
encouraging USFL players to unionize in order to drive up 
our costs; and attempting to co-opt the most powerful and 
influential USFL owners by offering them NFL franchises. 

As we launched our second season in the spring of 1984, 
we weren’t yet aware of the NFL’s secret campaign to destroy 
us, but we were probably feeling its effects. Several of our 
more vulnerable owners—most particularly those in Chicago, 
Washington, San Antonio, and Oklahoma—had begun to 
experience severe financial problems. The danger to the 
league was less losing a couple of franchises than having our 
credibility damaged. As long as we had problems, it was 
difficult to get the press to focus on our stronger teams. 
Instead, sportswriters wrote about declining attendance in the 
weaker cities, and the personal financial problems some 
owners were having. 

Meanwhile, as I feared, the long-range-planning study 



dragged on. A majority of owners had voted to hire an outside 
consultant, McKinsey and Company, to conduct the study. 
McKinsey is probably the best in its business, but I like 
consultants even less than I like committees. When it comes to 
making a smart decision, the most distinguished planning 
committee working with the highest-priced consultants 
doesn’t hold a candle to a group of guys with a reasonable 
amount of common sense and their own money on the line. 

McKinsey’s study took three months and cost a princely 
$600,000. Finally, on the morning of August 22, 1984, 
McKinsey executive Sharon Patrick presented her conclusions 
to the USFL owners, who had gathered in Chicago. The 
league’s best hope, she told us, was to continue to play in the 
spring, to limit expenditures severely, and perhaps to consider 
a move to the fall somewhere down the line. Among other 
things, she reported that a majority of fans who’d been 
surveyed in a poll wanted the USFL to stay in the spring. You 
can probably guess how much stock I put in polls. 

The reality was that we just couldn’t afford to adopt the 
McKinsey conclusions. Even if we cut our losses in the 
spring, there was no foreseeable chance of making a profit, 
and a lot of our weaker owners couldn’t afford to lose another 
dime. We needed to take radical action—and that’s what I 
stood up and said. Within two hours of Patrick’s presentation, 
I managed to get the issue of moving to the fall put to a vote. 
It passed by more than the required two-thirds majority. That 
same afternoon we announced the decision, to take effect 



following one last spring season. 

The other thing we began to discuss at the meeting was 
bringing an antitrust suit against the NFL. Specifically, we 
authorized our commissioner, Chet Simmons, to send NFL 
commissioner Pete Rozelle a letter putting the NFL on notice. 
Simmons stated our views gently: “The position of the USFL 
as a new sports enterprise, and the market position of the 
NFL, make it essential to the survival of the USFL that the 
NFL and the NFL owners operate within the bounds of the 
laws and regulations which govern the conduct of a business 
having a dominant market position.” Put more bluntly, our 
message was this: If you try to hurt us, we’ll sue you. 

By October, it was clear that something had changed 
dramatically in the tenor of our discussions with CBS and 
NBC. So long as we were just considering a move to the fall, 
both networks seemed interested in discussing a deal. No 
sooner did we announce our move, however, than they both 
backed off totally. It was obvious to me that the NFL was 
putting enormous pressure on the networks not to do business 
with us in the fall—particularly on ABC, with whom we 
already had a contract for the spring. 

Pete Rozelle later testified that he’d never even discussed 
the issue with Roone Arledge, the head of ABC Sports. To 
me, that was preposterous. Rozelle and Arledge are longtime 
colleagues and good friends. Would anyone seriously believe 
that Rozelle, highly concerned about the implications of the 



USFL’s move to the fall, wouldn’t make his views known to 
his friend Arledge? And is it really possible that Arledge, a 
man who made millions of dollars for ABC by inventing NFL 
Monday Night Football, wouldn’t be highly concerned with 
keeping Rozelle happy? 

The irony is that all three networks—not just ABC but NBC 
and CBS as well—were actually losing money on NFL games. 
After total rights fees in excess of $350 million a year, the 
networks, by their own estimates, lost many millions 
televising games during 1985. 

Even so, no network wanted to risk alienating the NFL. 
Football is the prestige TV sport, and in order to remain 
competitive with one another, the three networks were 
resigned to carrying the NFL as a loss leader. As for the 
USFL, we were left with no option. On October 17, 1984, we 
filed an antitrust suit in the southern district court of New 
York. Specifically, we asked that the NFL be limited to 
contracts with no more than two of the networks, and that we 
be awarded damages of $1.32 billion. 

In the meantime, we had a more immediate problem: 
staying alive. 

On January 3, 1985, the USFL held its third draft of college 
seniors. While the Generals had improved greatly, to 9-5, and 
averaged more than 40,000 fans a game, other teams were 
falling more deeply into the red. We very much needed a shot 
in the arm. 



My own solution was to go after the best and most exciting 
college senior. There was little doubt who that was. Doug 
Flutie of Boston College was a lock to win the Heisman 
Trophy. In his final game, playing against the University of 
Miami on national television, Flutie capped his career by 
throwing a last-second fifty-yard bomb for a touchdown, 
giving Boston College a 47-45 victory. Very quickly, the pass 
became one of those instant-replay classics, transforming 
Flutie into an overnight sports legend. I must have seen the 
pass at least two dozen times on various newscasts and sports 
shows. 

I also liked the fact that Flutie had great media potential. He 
was good-looking, well-spoken, and gutsy—the sort of guy 
the press loves to write about. There were two minor 
problems. One was that the Generals already had a very 
talented quarterback named Brian Sipe. The other was that 
Doug Flutie stood just five feet ten and weighed only 170 
pounds. A number of scouts were skeptical that he could 
make it in the pros, where virtually every defensive lineman is 
six feet six and weighs at least 260 pounds. 

In the end, I went with my instincts. Brian Sipe was a 
proven star, but he was also thirty-five years old, and his best 
years were probably behind him. Doug Flutie, on the other 
hand, had the potential to become the USFL’s Joe Namath. In 
the worst case, he’d generate a lot of press, which would help 
the Generals’ season-ticket sales and the image of the league 
generally. In the best case, he’d be a great player, too. 



On February 5, we signed Flutie to a five-year contract at 
over $1 million a year—which I personally guaranteed. I 
don’t like to do that, but a player of Flutie’s stature wasn’t 
about to risk signing with a financially shaky league unless he 
had some guarantees. If the league ever did go under, I 
figured, I could sell his contract to an NFL team. 

On February 6, I solved the issue of Brian Sipe by trading 
him to the Jacksonville Bulls. I wasn’t about to have a very 
highly paid quarterback sitting on the bench. 

Flutie made his debut on February 24, in an away game 
against the Birmingham Stallions. He started slow but came on 
very strong and almost pulled out a victory by leading the 
Generals to three touchdowns in the fourth quarter. As for his 
box-office value, it was even greater than I expected. The 
game was televised by ABC and drew a 9 rating—nearly twice 
what we’d averaged the previous season. 

Two other notable events occurred that first weekend of the 
season, both having to do with quarterbacks. One was the 
opening-game performance of a quarterback named Jim Kelly 
of the Houston Gamblers. Kelly threw for 574 yards and five 
touchdowns, proving that he was as good as any quarterback 
in either league. Unfortunately, the other quarterback news 
was not good. Brian Sipe, playing his first game for 
Jacksonville, suffered a separated shoulder, which seemed 
almost certain to end his season—and perhaps his career. 

On March 10, we had our home opener against the L.A. 



Express. If I had to pick a high point for the USFF, it was 
probably that game. Over 60,000 fans turned up, anticipating 
a duel between the newcomer Flutie and the USFF’s best 
proven quarterback, Steve Young. Both players put on 
dazzling shows, and better yet, the Generals came out on top. 
Flutie threw for two fourth-quarter touchdowns, to give us the 
victory, 35-24. 

The day after Flutie’s great game, I wrote a letter to Harry 
Usher, our new commissioner, suggesting that the cost of 
Flutie’s contract be shared among all USFF owners—on the 
grounds that Flutie’s promotional value was leaguewide. I 
knew it was highly unlikely that the other owners would go 
along—and they didn’t—but my attitude is that you can’t get 
hurt asking. 

Flutie, Kelly, and Young represented the good news about 
the USFF. The bad news was that we were still stuck with a 
lot of weak teams led by mediocre quarterbacks. 

My worst fears about the consequences of having weak 
partners came true midway through our 1985 season. John 
Bassett was the owner of the USFF franchise in Tampa Bay. 
Previously he’d been one of the founders of the ill-fated 
World Football Teague. From the very start, Bassett and I had 
been on opposite sides of nearly every issue—and specifically 
the move to the fall. I’d managed to bring the majority of my 
fellow owners over to my way of thinking, but Bassett never 
stopped fighting me, though he finally, reluctantly, did vote 



with the majority. Despite our disagreements, I liked him 
personally, and I felt sympathetic to his situation. On this 
Sunday afternoon in late March, it was widely known within 
the league that Bassett had cancer, that he was fighting for his 
life, and that his behavior had become increasingly 
unpredictable during the previous few months. 

What I’ll never know is whether Bassett’s illness affected 
his judgment that day. In any case, Bassett agreed to be 
interviewed by ABC announcer Keith Jackson, who began by 
asking what he thought was wrong with the USFL. What 
followed was a tirade. Before a national TV audience, Bassett 
viciously criticized the concept of moving the USFL to the 
fall. He called the league its own worst enemy. He said the 
USFL was guilty of mismanagement and virtually every other 
horrible sin he could conjure up. I caught the interview on a 
TV monitor in the press box, and I couldn’t believe what I 
was hearing. My first thought was that Bassett would make a 
great witness for the NFL in our antitrust suit. My second 
thought was that he was just a terribly frustrated man, 
thoughtlessly venting anger. 

If any one person had the potential to offset the damage 
wrought by Bassett and our other weaker owners, it was 
probably Harvey Myerson, the attorney we hired in the middle 
of 1985 to take over our antitrust case. Myerson was the head 
of the litigation department at the firm Finley Kumble, and he 
was an expert in antitrust litigation. He also had the sort of 
pugnacious, confrontational attitude you need when you’re 



the underdog taking on the establishment. Most of the other 
USFL owners had long since written off the possibility that 
we’d win the antitrust suit. The NFL, they believed, was just 
too entrenched. But from the first time Myerson met us in 
April 1985, he told us he felt we had a very strong case. He 
said that we should pull out all the stops to bring it to trial, and 
that there was a better-than-even chance we’d win. 

In the meantime, one bright spot amidst all the USFL’s 
troubles was the fact that the Generals—and specifically 
Herschel Walker—were playing so well. For the first two 
weeks of the season Herschel simply wasn’t being utilized. 
He’d call me up in my office, depressed, and say, “Mr. 
Trump, I can run over these guys, if they’d just give me the 
ball.” I ranted and raved to our coach, Walt Michaels, but it 
wasn’t until I literally threatened to fire him that he got the 
point. In the seventh game of the season, Herschel was finally 
let loose. He ran the ball thirty times for almost 250 yards, 
setting a league record. In each of the next ten games, he ran 
for more than 100 yards. By the end of the season he’d racked 
up 2,411 yards. That broke the all-time professional football 
rushing record, held previously by Eric Dickerson of the 
NFL. I got a great kick out of that. 

Unfortunately, Doug Flutie was injured late in the 1985 
season, and that almost certainly cost us the USFL 
championship. In the playoffs, we lost by three points to the 
transplanted Baltimore Stars, while Flutie stood on the 
sidelines. 



In February 1986 we agreed to reduce the number of USFL 
teams from fourteen to eight. In the process, we weeded out 
the owners with the biggest financial problems. We also 
consolidated our strengths. The Houston Gamblers, for 
example, merged with my Generals. As a result, we created a 
dream backfield that I’m convinced had no equal in 
professional football: Herschel Walker at running back and 
Jim Kelly at quarterback. The other teams that survived the 
consolidation were also all among our strongest and most 
popular: Memphis, Baltimore, Jacksonville, Tampa, Orlando, 
Arizona, and Birmingham. 

In April we got more good news when a federal judge 
named Peter Leisure set a jury trial to begin the next month in 
our antitrust suit against the NFL. That ensured us a verdict 
before the start of our first fall season. If we won the suit, 
we’d be in great shape to launch. If we lost, I considered it 
highly unlikely that the USFL could survive—but at least 
we’d finally be able to cut our losses. 

The future of the USFL now rested in the hands of the six 
jurors chosen to hear our case. 

The jury system is designed to ensure the fairest possible 
trial. The problem is that a pool of randomly selected jurors 
isn’t necessarily qualified to make judgments on complicated 
issues. Sometimes that isn’t bad, particularly if you have a 
case that’s weak and a lawyer who is very persuasive. The 
problem is unpredictability. You can have a great case and 



come out a loser, and you can have a terrible case but come 
out a winner. 

We got to present our side first, and very quickly, a 
consensus formed in the courtroom that Harvey Myerson was 
beating the living daylights out of the NFL. He put 
Commissioner Pete Rozelle on the stand and almost literally 
took him apart. For twenty-six years, Rozelle had been 
running the NFL very successfully and very smoothly. Of 
course, you don’t have to be a genius to run a monopoly. Put 
that same man up against a tough competitor, and it may be a 
whole different story. 

Myerson pressed, and Rozelle got flustered. He mumbled, 
stumbled, and spoke badly, he turned red, and he took back 
statements. At times he appeared to be flat-out lying. Halfway 
through his week of cross-examination, Rozelle had become 
physically sick. His performance was so weak that I found 
myself actually feeling sorry for him. In retrospect, however, I 
realize that the jury probably felt at least as sorry for Rozelle 
as I did, and that may well have helped save the NFL’s case. 

Rozelle was least credible, I thought, when he talked about 
the Harvard seminar entitled “The USFL vs. the NFL”—the 
linchpin of our case. Rozelle claimed he hadn’t known 
anything about the seminar, and that he got “physically ill” 
when he first heard about it, weeks after the fact. 

“To your stomach, sir?” asked Harvey Myerson, totally 
deadpan. 



“Yes,” said Rozelle. 

“I see,” said Myerson. “How long did it take you to 
recover?” 

“About half a day,” Rozelle replied. I doubt that a single 
person in the courtroom believed Rozelle during that 
exchange. 

At another point, Myerson introduced some devastatingly 
incriminating comments that Rozelle had made before a 
congressional committee, back in 1961. At the time, the 
NFL’s games were being shown on just one network, CBS. 
“If all the networks were tied up by one football league,” a 
senator asked Rozelle during his testimony, “wouldn’t the 
other league possibly be at a major competitive disadvantage?” 

“I should certainly think so,” Rozelle said, quickly adding, 
“There is no intention on our part of using more than one 
network.” By 1987, of course, the NFL had all three networks 
tied up. Didn’t that put our league at a major competitive 
disadvantage? Rozelle could only hem and haw. 

The one time I myself directly contradicted Rozelle’s 
testimony was over his description of a meeting the two of us 
had in March 1984. At the time, the USFL owners were still 
debating whether to move to the fall. The Porter seminar at 
Harvard had taken place several weeks earlier, and one of 
Porter’s main strategies for destroying the USFL had been to 
try to co-opt the strongest USFL franchise owners by 
promising us NFL franchises. 



At Rozelle’s suggestion, I rented a suite at the Pierre Hotel 
for a meeting on March 12. I like to keep every option open in 
life, and I was certainly interested in what the commissioner of 
the NFL had on his mind. Rozelle testified at the trial that 
during our meeting I told him I was interested in purchasing 
an NFL franchise, and that I’d get out of the USFL if I could 
get into the NFL. It was ridiculous on the face of it. I never 
had any interest in owning a football franchise outside of the 
New York area, and I had long since determined that neither 
of the two New York-based NFL teams—the Giants or the 
Jets—was up for sale. 

What really happened at the meeting is that Rozelle tried to 
woo me, plain and simple. He said he considered me a good 
candidate for an NFL franchise, whether it was the Generals, 
through merger, or an NFL team, which he said he could help 
me get. In return, he said, he wanted two things: that the 
USFL not move to the fall, and that the league not bring an 
antitrust suit against the NFL. 

I had no doubt about what Rozelle was up to. He was 
testing the waters. If he could get rid of the USFL merely by 
absorbing a couple of our teams into the NFL, he was 
prepared to do that, I’m certain. At the same time, by merely 
dangling an offer he gave himself deniability, in the event that 
I turned him down. That’s exactly what I did. Sure enough, he 
rewrote the story of our meeting. 

We called eighteen witnesses in all during the first month of 



the trial, and we scored a lot of points. Myerson showed how 
the NFL had bullied the three networks into refusing to 
consider giving the USFL a TV contract. He showed why the 
USFL could not survive without such a contract. He offered 
endless evidence—led by the Porter study—that the NFL had 
consciously and illegally set out to destroy the USFL. 

By the time we’d finished presenting our witnesses, even 
the press was beginning to sense the possibility that we might 
win the case. The headline of a story in Sports Illustrated 

caught the mood best. GIVE THE FIRST ROUND TO THE USFL, it said, 

followed by an even more devastating subhead: “The 
embattled younger league has scored tellingly against the NFL 
in the trial of its $1.32 billion antitrust suit. Now the NFL has 
the ball.” 

Looking back, I think our strength may have backfired, just 
as the NFL’s weakness ended up prompting the jury’s 
sympathy Myerson’s style—the silk handkerchief in the 
pocket of his perfectly tailored suit, his theatrical way of 
speaking, the methodical relentlessness of his attack—may 
have come off as too aggressive and too slick. By contrast, I 
think, the NFL came off as the beleaguered underdogs. Like 
Rozelle, who became sick and was so unconvincing during his 
cross-examination, the NFL lawyer, Frank Rothman, was so 
weak and ashen-faced the last days of the trial that everyone, 
including me, felt very bad for him. Many didn’t even believe 
he would be able to finish, and in fact he was rushed to a 
hospital for a major operation shortly after the trial’s 



conclusion. I believe Rothman’s troubles elicited further 
sympathy from the jury. 

I was part of the problem. As a witness, I was well spoken 
and professional, I think—very much a contrast to Pete 
Rozelle. But that probably played into the NFL’s hands. From 
day one, the NFL painted me as a vicious, greedy, 
Machiavellian billionaire, intent only on serving my selfish 
ends at everyone else’s expense. “The USFL,” attorney Frank 
Rothman told the jury in his opening remarks, “is controlled 
and dominated by Donald Trump, who can buy and sell many 
of the owners in the NFL.” 

In truth, of course, the wealthy, powerful NFL owners 
cowered only to the extent that it served their ends. In 
retrospect, we might have been better off to put on the witness 
stand several of the smaller USFL owners who’d lost their 
shirts and had genuinely sad stories to tell. 

The other way the NFL beat us was in pure public relations. 
I’ve got to give this to Rozelle: he’s always been great at 
promoting his league. His chief spokesman is a guy named 
Joe Brown, and Rozelle deserves credit for using him well. 
After each day’s testimony, Brown would go to the halls and 
lobby the press masterfully, telling them what a great day it 
had just been for the NFL. It drove me crazy. I’d say to Harry 
Usher, our commissioner, “Why aren’t you out lobbying the 
press?” And he’d say, “It isn’t important. It’s the jury we’ve 
got to convince.” 



Unfortunately, that’s not the way it works. Although the 
jury is instructed not to read any newspaper coverage or watch 
any television reports about the trial, it’s nearly impossible to 
resist reading about a case you’re part of, particularly one 
that’s getting massive attention. Even if some jurors did resist, 
they undoubtedly heard about the trial coverage from their 
friends and family. Why else, after all, would Rozelle assign 
Joe Brown to lobby reporters every day for six weeks? 

For all that, when the jury finally began deliberations on 
July 25, 1986, I was convinced we’d made the more effective 
case, and that they’d find in our favor. 

What I never anticipated was that we could win—and end 
up losing anyway. After four days of deliberation, the six- 
member jury concluded on July 29 that the NFL had violated 
antitrust laws by conspiring to monopolize professional 
football, and that they did illegally damage the USFL. But 
then they voted to award us only a token one dollar in 
damages. It was a hollow victory. Without damages, the 
decision had no teeth, since the NFL didn’t get punished for 
breaking the law. 

When the jurors were interviewed by reporters immediately 
after the verdict was announced, it turned out that they’d been 
deeply divided. At least two of them had wanted to award us 
substantial damages. One, a schoolteacher named Miriam 
Sanchez, had favored giving us damages of $300 million but 
said that she’d misunderstood the mechanism for doing so. “I 



didn’t understand the instructions,” she told reporters, “so I 
had to put my faith in the judge, hoping he would give the 
USFL more money.” 

I wasn’t happy about the outcome, but in a way I was 
relieved. My attitude is that you do your best, and if it doesn’t 
work, you move on to the next thing. By the time the trial 
took place, I had lost quite a lot of money on the Generals— 
and the USFL had lost many times my number. Without the 
prospect of a fall network television contract, there wasn’t any 
point in investing more money. 

Most of my fellow owners agreed. One week after the 
decision, the USFL owners met and voted to suspend the 
season. At the same time we voted to appeal the jury’s ruling. 
Unfortunately, the fans come out the biggest losers. The 
NFL’s monopoly power is secure again, and the owners have 
less reason than ever to consider adding new teams in cities 
that have long been seeking franchises. 

Meanwhile the best USFL players have been picked up by 
NFL teams. Herschel Walker was signed by the Dallas 
Cowboys. Because I’d personally guaranteed Walker’s 
contract, he could have collected $1.2 million from me for 
each of the next six years and never played football. But 
Herschel’s a competitor, and the money was secondary. 

As it turned out, I made a very good deal with Dallas. They 
could have refused to pay for his big contract. But figuring 
that Dallas was under intense fan pressure to sign Herschel, I 



told them I was interested in letting Herschel go only if they 
picked up the full cost of his contract. Sure enough, they 
agreed. It was good for me, it was good for Herschel, and it’s 
even turned out to be good for Dallas. Herschel joined the 
team in August, and although he had virtually no time to 
practice, he finished the season as the Cowboy’s leading 
combined rushing and receiving yardage gainer. 

Jim Kelly also immediately became a star as quarterback for 
the Buffalo Bills. Freddie Gilbert, one of our defensive 
lineman, went to Atlanta and established himself as one of the 
team’s best players. Even Doug Flutie, who everyone said was 
too small for the NFL, was signed by the Chicago Bears. 
Dozens of USFL players were signed to NFL contracts and 
many have become stars on their new teams. 

Watching players like Herschel Walker and Jim Kelly play 
in the NFL does sometimes make me wish our league could 
have survived. I’m convinced that if the USFL had played last 
season, the Generals would have fielded one of the best teams 
in professional football. 

Not that I’ve ever given up entirely. I’m a big believer in 
comebacks, and the USFL is appealing this ridiculous verdict. 
In recent months, I’ve received numerous calls from a very 
smart, very persistent guy who is trying to put together an 
entirely new fall league. He wants me to take the New York 
franchise—and I’m seriously considering it. 



12 

ICE CAPADES 


Rebuilding Wo liman Rink 


1 never had a master plan. I just got fed up one day and 
decided to do something about it. On the morning of May 
22, 1986, there was a story on the front page of the New 
York Times saying that New York City officials had decided to 
start all over in their effort to rebuild the Wollman Skating 
Rink in Central Park. If everything went well, said the city, the 
rink would be ready to reopen in approximately two years. 

I couldn’t believe it. 

First of all, there was no reason to believe anything would 
go well, much less everything. The Wollman Rink, built in 
1950, had first closed for renovations in June 1980. The work 
was scheduled to take two and a half years. Even that seemed 
like a long time to rebuild an ice-skating rink. 

Coincidentally, in June 1980, I broke ground for Trump 
Tower, a sixty-eight-story skyscraper with six floors of 
shopping, thousands of square feet of office space, and 263 
residential apartments. Two and a half years later we 




completed Trump Tower, on time and on budget. 

From my new apartment, I had a view of Wollman Rink. It 
was not a pretty sight. Although millions of dollars had 
already been spent on its renovation, it was obvious, even 
from a distance, that the rink was nowhere near finished. 

Three more years passed, millions more dollars were spent, 
and things just got worse. So bad, in fact, that on this May 
morning in 1986 the city felt compelled to announce it was 
starting the whole process over from scratch. 

I knew absolutely nothing about building ice-skating rinks, 
but I did know something about construction. If it took me 
two and a half years to put up a major skyscraper, surely it 
was possible to build a $2 million ice-skating rink in a matter 
of months. Two years earlier, when the job was already a 
disaster, I’d called Henry Stern, commissioner of parks, and 
offered to take over construction from the city, for no fee. He 
turned me down. Now, after reading about this latest debacle, 
I called Henry again and repeated my offer. He had the same 
response. “No, thanks,” he said. “We can do it ourselves.” 

“That’s great, Henry,” I said, “except that you told me the 
same thing two years ago and look what happened.” I decided 
to write a very strongly worded letter to Ed Koch, the mayor 
of New York. I was appalled by the city’s incompetence. I 
genuinely felt I could get the job done, and I believed the rink 
was something hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers— 
including my own children—had a right to enjoy. Whatever 



anyone may think, my motive was that simple. 

“Dear Ed,” my letter began. “For many years I have 
watched with amazement as New York City repeatedly failed 
on its promises to complete and open the Wollman Skating 
Rink. Building the rink, which essentially involves the 
pouring of a concrete slab over coolant piping, should take no 
more than four months’ time. To hear that, after six years, it 
will now take another two years, is unacceptable to all the 
thousands of people who are waiting to skate once again at the 
Wollman Rink. I and all other New Yorkers are tired of 
watching the catastrophe of Wollman Rink. The incompetence 
displayed on this simple construction project must be 
considered one of the great embarrassments of your 
administration. I fear that in two years there will be no skating 
at the Wollman Rink, with the general public being the 
losers.” 

Then I got to the real point: 

“I am offering to construct and pay for a brand-new 
Wollman Ice-Skating Rink and have it open to the public by 
November of this winter. I would lease the rink from the city 
at a fair market rental, and run it properly after its 
completion.” 

I sent the letter to Ed Koch on May 28, 1986. He wrote me 
a response by return mail. Somewhat to my surprise, he 
belittled my offer. The city wasn’t about to let me operate the 
rink, he said, but they’d be delighted if I’d donate the $3 



million to rebuild it and supervise the construction. He made a 
few more sarcastic comments and ended by saying, “With 
bated breath I await your response.” 

The tone of the mayor’s letter irritated me. Fortunately, I 
wasn’t the only one who was put off by it, and I have Koch 
himself to thank for that. I hadn’t released my letter to the 
press because I didn’t want to be accused of grandstanding. 
Koch, however, decided to release his letter. Apparently, he 
figured that if he made fun of my offer publicly, I’d just 
quietly slink away. 

He totally underestimated the press reaction. First, the press 
thrives on confrontation. They also love stories about 
extremes, whether they’re great successes or terrible failures. 
This story had it all. Perhaps most important, many reporters 
tend to see themselves as consumer advocates. Almost nothing 
gets them as outraged as a boondoggle that victimizes average 
citizens. The city’s fiasco at the Wollman Rink was an 
absolute classic. 

Even I was surprised at how totally the press took my side. 
Obviously, that doesn’t always happen. But this time, within 
three days, there were dozens of articles and editorials 
attacking Koch for his reaction to my offer. 

“The Koch administration,” said the Daily News in an 
editorial, “is hemming and hawing over Donald Trump’s offer 
to rebuild and operate Wollman Rink in Central Park. Why? 
The offer is genuine, with no apparent strings attached. Koch 



should grab it and heave a sigh of relief that a long-running, 
costly disaster is off his hands. So far the Mayor has raised a 
lot of phony objections.... Maybe the problem [is that] Koch 
& Co. are embarrassed that they’ve squandered $12 million 
on Wollman.” 

“Trump is offering to take over the Wollman project, to 
rebuild the rink, and to have it open by November at no cost 
to the city,” wrote the New York Post. “After the whole 13- 
year multimillion-dollar debacle, you would think that they’d 
be jumping for joy. Not so. City officials seem more interested 
in thinking up reasons not to go forward than in making a 
deal. The city should give Donald Trump a speedy hearing— 
the Wollman farce has been running long enough.” 

“Let him have a go at it,” said Newsday. “After all, the city 
has proved nothing except that it can’t get the job done.” 

If there’s one thing I’ve learned from dealing with 
politicians over the years, it’s that the only thing guaranteed to 
force them into action is the press—or, more specifically, fear 
of the press. You can apply all kinds of pressure, make all 
sorts of pleas and threats, contribute large sums of money to 
their campaigns, and generally it gets you nothing. But raise 
the possibility of bad press, even in an obscure publication, 
and most politicians will jump. Bad press translates into 
potential lost votes, and if a politician loses enough votes, he 
won’t get reelected. If that happens, he might have to go out 
and take a 9 to 5 job. That’s the last thing most politicians 



want to do. 

What you have to understand about Ed Koch is that he’s a 
bully, pure and simple. Bullies may act tough, but they’re 
really closet cowards. The only people bullies push around are 
the ones they know they can beat. Confront a strong, 
competent person, and he’ll fight back harder than ever. 
Confront a bully, and in most cases he’ll fold like a deck of 
cards. 

Sure enough, the tide turned, overnight. No sooner did the 
press jump on Koch’s case than he reversed field completely. 
Suddenly, the city was virtually begging me to take on the 
Wo liman Rink job. On June 6, I sat down in my office with 
city officials, including Henry Stern, to negotiate the terms 
under which I’d rebuild the Wollman Rink. Until then, the city 
had insisted on competitive bidding, as is required on any 
city-financed construction job. I suggested a simple solution. 
I’d put up all of the money for the construction of the rink 
myself. In turn, I’d be reimbursed, over as many years as it 
took, from any profits the rink earned. In other words, I’d not 
only supervise construction, I’d also lend the city $3 million 
for an indeterminate period—and forever if the rink didn’t 
prove profitable. 

The city, in its infinite wisdom, balked. “There’s no way 
we’re going to allow that,” city officials told me. “There’s no 
way we’re going to allow you to make a profit on the rink.” 

“No, you don’t understand,” I said. “If the rink does make 



money, I’ll use it to reduce my loan. I’m not looking for 
personal profit. In fact, if I ever do get my money back, I’ll 
give any subsequent profits to charity.” To my astonishment 
—and to the astonishment of my own lawyers—the city 
wouldn’t budge. Instead, they came up with a 
counterproposal. I’d still put up the $3 million, as a way of 
getting around the competitive-bidding issue, but on the day I 
finished, the city would reimburse me in full. 

It’s fortunate for those city officials that they chose to go 
into city government rather than business. The deal they were 
suggesting was far worse for the city than the one I’d 
originally offered. I wasn’t about to fight them at my own 
expense. 

By the end of the day on Friday, June 6—ten days after my 
original offer—we came to an agreement, subject to final 
approval by the city’s Board of Estimate. I’d put up the 
construction money and agree to complete the work by 
December 15. At that point, the city would reimburse me for 
my costs, up to a cap of just less than $3 million, but only if 
the rink worked. If I came in under budget, the city would pay 
me back only what I’d spent. If I went over budget, I’d cover 
the overruns myself. That much the city was graciously 
willing to let me do. 

I had just one challenge left: building the skating rink fast 
and building it right. If I failed—if I was even one day late, or 
one dollar over budget—my plan was to pack my bags and 



take the next plane to Argentina. There was no way Ed Koch 
or anyone else would ever let me live it down. 

Since I myself knew absolutely nothing about building 
rinks, I set out to find the best skating-rink builder I could. 
Logic suggested that the best place to look was Canada. Ice 
skating is to Canadians what baseball is to Americans—the 
national pastime. The top builders, I figured, were probably 
the companies that built rinks for Canada’s professional 
hockey teams. Sure enough, everyone I talked with agreed 
that a company called Cimco, based in Toronto, was the best 
of the best. Among other projects, they’d built a rink for the 
Montreal Canadiens. I got their top guy on the phone, and I 
began with a very basic question: “What does it take to build a 
great outdoor skating rink?” 

He gave me a very quick course in rink construction. The 
key choice, he said, was which ice-making system to use. The 
city had originally decided to use a relatively new technology 
in which the freezing agent is Freon. The rationale was that a 
Freon system requires less electricity, which translates into 
some minor energy-cost savings. The disadvantage of the 
Freon system is that it’s far more delicate, temperamental, and 
difficult to maintain—particularly in a public facility where 
personnel turns over frequently. Among ice-skating facilities 
that used the Freon system, my friend from Cimco told me, at 
least one third had experienced problems. 

The other option, which had been used in hundreds of 



skating rinks for decades, was a brine system, in which salt 
water is circulated through the pipes. It costs a little more to 
run than a Freon system, but the advantage is that it’s highly 
reliable and incredibly durable. The Rockefeller Center 
Skating Rink has used a brine system since it opened in 1936 
and has never experienced a major problem. 

By the time I finished my first call, I’d made up my mind to 
use a brine system in rebuilding the Wollman Rink. The city, 
in fact, had finally come to the same conclusion. The only 
difference was that they first wasted six years and millions of 
dollars. 

I soon discovered that the city’s incompetence on the 
Wollman Rink project had extended to every imaginable 
detail, large and small. On June 16, one week after I’d made 
my deal to take over rebuilding the rink, a city report was 
released on mistakes made at the Wollman Rink over the past 
six years. The study had taken fifteen months to complete— 
four times what I’d given myself to totally rebuild the rink. 
Worse yet, while the report provided endless examples of 
incompetence, it came to absolutely no conclusions about who 
was responsible for the fiasco and what could be done to 
avoid such failures in the future. 

The one thing the report did provide was an astounding 
chronology of sloppiness, indecision, incompetence and sheer 
stupidity. If it weren’t so pathetic, it would have been almost 
comical. 



The city first closed the rink for renovations in June 1980. 
By the time plans had been drawn and the bidding process 
completed, almost a year had passed. In March 1981, work 
finally began on installing approximately 22 miles of the very 
delicate, expensive copper piping used in a Freon cooling 
system. In the meantime, however, the Parks Department had 
second thoughts about where to locate the compressor room 
and what sort of refrigeration equipment to use. Even as the 
piping was being installed, all work was halted on the 
equipment that would eventually be needed to operate the 
rink’s cooling system. 

Even if the ice-making equipment had been finished and 
installed, the design of the rink was such that it never had a 
chance of working. Specifically, the base of the rink was 
designed on a pitch, so that it was approximately eight inches 
higher at one end than at the other. The pitch had a purpose. 
The fact that it ended up being eleven inches was an accident. 
The point of the pitch was that during the summer the city 
hoped to use the rink as a reflecting pond, and apparently a 
pond reflects light better if its base is sloped. In the winter, 
however, that same sloped base would cause a problem. 

It doesn’t take a genius to realize that when you try to make 
ice under those circumstances, there are only two possibilities. 
The better one is that ice will form, but that because the depth 
of the water varies, the consistency of the ice won’t be 
uniform. The worse and far more likely result is that the water 
at the deeper end of the rink simply won’t freeze at all, no 



matter how powerful the ice-making machinery. 

Even that issue soon became secondary. In July, two 
months after the laying of the pipes began, a torrential rain 
flooded the rink, depositing a thick layer of silt on the newly 
laid pipes. It wasn’t until September that the Parks Department 
finally got around to hiring a crew to repair the damage. 

In the meantime, a new dispute had emerged within the 
Parks Department about how the concrete sidewalk 
surrounding the rink should be designed. The result was that 
the pouring of all concrete—including the concrete meant to 
form the rink’s base—was held up nine months while a debate 
over the sidewalk raged on. So, unfortunately, did winter. For 
nine months, the newly laid delicate copper pipes were 
exposed to horrible weather. There were major snowstorms 
and flooding. In addition, because copper is quite valuable, 
vandals climbed over the fences and tried to cut off pieces of 
the pipe to resell. By the spring, it was as if those twenty-two 
miles of pipes had been through a war. Nonetheless, not one 
person thought to check them for possible damage. 

In June of 1982, two years after the rink was first closed, 
the concrete was finally poured over the untested copper 
pipes. Contractors often use a vibrating machine when they 
pour over uneven surfaces, since it helps prevent bubbles 
from forming. However, the vibrating had an unforeseen 
result: it began shaking loose the joints of the copper pipes. At 
the same time, the contractor had even bigger problems to 



contend with: he had underestimated by a great deal how 
much concrete it would take to cover the rink. The key to 
pouring concrete is to do it all at once, on a continuous basis, 
because that’s the only way to ensure it will adhere and mesh 
uniformly. Rather than interrupt his pour, the contractor 
decided to dilute his concrete mixture with water. It was a 
recipe for disaster. 

Less than a week went by before cracks began appearing on 
the surface of the newly poured concrete slab. Not 
coincidentally, the cracks were concentrated at the end of the 
rink where the cement content had been diluted, and where the 
vibrating machine had been turned off. 

Delays in deciding where to locate the refrigeration 
equipment prompted another problem. By the time the city 
made its decision—after sixteen months of deliberations—the 
contractor originally hired to install the equipment insisted on 
a “modification” of his original agreement. Specifically, he 
demanded more money. Those negotiations took another 
twelve months, and it wasn’t until July 1983 that the city 
approved a new contract—on the contractor’s terms. The 
completion date on installation of the refrigeration equipment 
was pushed forward yet again, to September 1984. 

In the late fall of 1984 the system was finally tested for the 
first time. It proved unable to sustain pressure for long enough 
to create ice because it turned out that there were leaks in the 
pipes beneath the concrete slab. Between October and 



December of 1984, six leaks were found and repaired. No 
luck. The system was tested again and still couldn’t make ice. 

It was at that point that I called Henry Stern and made my 
first offer to take over construction of the rink. When he 
turned me down, I said, “Listen, would you like to walk over 
together and take a look, and perhaps I can at least make some 
suggestions?” A few days later, in the dead of winter, we 
walked over to the rink. I was shocked by what I saw. 

There were literally hundreds of tiny cracks in the concrete 
slab. Worse than that, there were at least a dozen huge gaping 
holes cut into the slab at various places. When I inquired, I 
found out that the holes had been cut through the concrete in 
order to get at the leaks in the pipes underneath. 
Unfortunately, the jackhammers used to make holes in 
concrete are very violent, and the pipes underneath are very 
delicate. In the effort to get at the leaking pipes, these violent 
men with their violent jackhammers actually made the 
problem much worse. 

Right then and there I turned to Stern and said, “You have a 
major problem. You’ll never find these leaks. In the 
meantime, you’ll just create bigger leaks. Forget it. Start all 
over.” Henry tried to be polite, but it was clear that starting 
over was the last thing he’d consider. 

In the spring of 1985, the city came up with a wonderful 
new idea. At a cost of $200,000, they hired an outside 
engineering consultant to study why Freon was leaking from 



the pipes, and to recommend solutions. The firm promised to 
have its report within four months. Nine months later—in 
December 1985—the firm announced that they’d been unable 
to isolate the cause of the leaks. 

Nearly six years had now passed since the Wo liman Rink 
was first closed for renovations. Nearly $13 million had been 
spent on the effort. The Parks Department finally concluded 
that the Freon system would have to be scrapped and replaced 
by a brine system. On May 21, 1986, they announced the new 
$3 million renovation plan and the eighteen-month timetable. 
That was when I finally convinced the city to let me take over. 

By mid-June, when the Board of Estimate approved the deal 
I’d negotiated with the city, I had already begun work. One 
thing I discovered was that the city had agreed to pay a 
$150,000 fee to yet another consulting company, this time to 
provide recommendations about how to build the rink with a 
brine system. The city’s contract specified that the company, 
St. Onge Ruff Associates (SORA), would begin work on July 
1, 1986, and deliver its report by the end of December. In 
other words, I had agreed to finish rebuilding the rink before 
the city was scheduled to get the report on how it ought to be 
done. 

On the off chance that the consultants might have some 
intelligent suggestions, I decided to sit down with them. I 
probably shouldn’t have been surprised by what I discovered: 
the two gentlemen who ran the firm were specialists in 



refrigeration but had never before been involved in building a 
skating rink. They hadn’t the faintest idea what it entailed. So 
much for their help. 

I hired Cimco to build the refrigeration and piping 
equipment for the system and to advise me generally. To build 
the rink itself, I hired HRH, the construction company that had 
already built the Hyatt and Trump Tower for me and had 
proved themselves high-quality general contractors. In this 
case, they generously offered to do the work at cost. 
Meanwhile, Chase Manhattan, with whom I had a long 
banking relationship, stepped forward and offered to lend all 
the money for construction, again at no profit. It was the sort 
of project everyone could relate to and appreciate. 

When I went to see the rink, things were even worse than 
I’d imagined. For example, there were gaping holes in the 
roof of the skaters’ house, and the result had been massive 
water damage to the interior of the building. But even the 
smaller things I noticed reflected the city’s approach to the 
job. For example, as I walked into the rink, I came upon a row 
of canvas sacks, abandoned and half covered by weeds. When 
I looked inside, I discovered that the sacks were filled with 
plants, which were once intended to be part of the new 
landscaping. Instead, they’d been left on the ground, 
unopened, and had died. 

Just as I was making this discovery, a city worker walked 
by and stepped right on one of the few living plants on the 



site. He didn’t look back. In a way, it was a perfect metaphor: 
the rink being trampled by one of the people who was being 
paid to fix it. 

The incident reminded me of a time, several years earlier, 
when I was walking by the rink on a beautiful summer day. It 
was about two in the afternoon, and there, right in the middle 
of the unfinished rink, were perhaps thirty laborers. Not one 
of them was working. I figured they were on coffee break. 
Perhaps an hour later, I walked past the rink again. The same 
men were there, in exactly the same positions, as if they were 
on a permanent siesta. I didn’t fully realize the implications of 
the scene at the time. Now I saw it as a symptom of the bigger 
problem at Wollman Rink: there was absolutely no one in 
charge. 

Leadership is perhaps the key to getting any job done. 
There wasn’t a single day when I didn’t check on the progress 
we were making on the rink. Most days, I visited the site 
personally. I’d given myself six months to finish, and based 
on the city’s record, meeting that deadline would be a minor 
miracle. By my own calculations, however, six months 
actually left me a cushion of a month, in case anything 
significant did go wrong. If absolutely everything went right, 
I felt it was possible we’d finish the job in four months. 

One of the first decisions we made was to build the new 
rink on top of the old one, rather than rip it out altogether. By 
the first of August, we were able to lay a level subbase for the 



new rink, on top of which we would install the piping and 
pour the concrete for a flat-bottomed rink. Cimco was busy 
building two huge, 35,000-pound refrigeration units. I hadn’t 
realized, when I offered to take on the job, how big Wollman 
Rink actually is. At nearly three quarters of an acre, it is one of 
the largest man-made skating rinks in the country. 

Even before we began construction, we were besieged by 
calls from the press, seeking progress reports. Reporters who 
normally had no interest whatsoever in construction suddenly 
wanted to know the smallest details about the laying of pipe, 
the pouring of concrete, and the building of a compressor 
room. 

After the first dozen or so calls, I decided to hold a press 
conference to answer everyone’s questions in a single forum. 
On August 7, with only the subfloor in place, we met the 
press at the rink. To my surprise, perhaps three dozen 
reporters, photographers, and cameramen showed up, 
including representatives from every local television station 
and both wire services. I had no earthshaking news to 
announce. All I could report was that everything was 
proceeding right on schedule and that we expected to be open 
by December. That was enough. The next day there were 
stories in every newspaper with headlines like TRUMP HAS AN ICE 

SURPRISE FOR SKATERS and TRUMP PUTS THE ICING ON WO T I M AN CAKE. 

There were those who said I went a little overboard holding 
press conferences about Wollman Rink. Perhaps they’re right, 



but I can only say that the press couldn’t get enough of this 
story. At least a dozen reporters showed up for every press 
conference we held. 

Nor did the story of the rink generate just local attention. 
Dozens of newspapers as far away as Miami, Detroit, and Los 
Angeles ran long pieces about the Wollman Rink saga. Time 
magazine devoted a full page in its “Nation” section to the 
story. It was a simple, accessible drama about the contrast 
between governmental incompetence and the power of 
effective private enterprise. 

From September 7 through 10, we laid twenty-two miles of 
pipes. On September 11, a convoy of cement trucks arrived 
and we began a continuous pour that lasted ten hours. There 
was no shortage of cement. The next day, when the engineers 
checked to see how evenly the pour had turned out, it was 
perfectly level. On September 15, the newly built refrigeration 
equipment was installed in the renovated compressor room. 
The only obstacle left was the heat. On the day we poured the 
concrete, the temperature climbed to 87 degrees. It occurred to 
me that we were going to be ready for skaters before the 
weather was ready for us. 

By the end of September, all of our ice-making equipment 
was in place. All we needed to test our system was a 
succession of four days during which the temperature stayed 
below 55 degrees. Instead, for two weeks, one beautiful 
unseasonably warm day followed another. For the first time in 



my life, I found myself wishing for winter. 

Finally, on October 12, the temperature dropped below 55 
and it stayed down for several days. On October 15, we 
conducted our first test of the new system, sending brine 
through the piping. There were no leaks and the pressure held. 
That night, following a rainfall, ice formed on the rink— 
beautiful, clear, long-awaited ice. It was almost four months to 
the day since Td gotten approval to renovate the rink. We’d 
also managed to come in more than $750,000 under our $3 
million budget. With the city’s blessing, we used the leftover 
money to renovate the adjacent skatehouse and restaurant. 

During most of the construction, the city stayed out of our 
way—in large part because I instructed my men to keep park 
officials off the site. When they did try to interfere, it 
invariably turned into disaster. As an example, after we’d 
finished the rink, a crew from the Parks Department showed 
up carting a small tree, which, they announced, the city 
wanted to plant in my honor. It wasn’t enough for one or two 
guys to handle the job. A crew of perhaps a half dozen men 
came, among them a park horticulturist to supervise the job. 
The tree itself was transported in a tractor with a back-hoe 
loader. 

By total coincidence, I walked up to the rink just as the men 
were beginning to plant the tree. It happened to be one of the 
ugliest, scrawniest little trees you’re ever likely to see. I could 
have lived with that. What got me absolutely nuts was the way 



they were planting the tree. Just the previous day, we’d 
planted beautiful specimen sod all around the perimeter of the 
rink. It had rained the night before and the ground under the 
newly planted grass was soft. What do these men do but drive 
their tractor right over the new grass, completely trampling it. 
In a matter of minutes, these six men—most of whom weren’t 
needed in the first place—managed to totally destroy a 
beautiful planting job that had taken two days to complete and 
now would require three months to grow back in. 

Around this time, I got a letter from Gordon Davis, the 
parks commissioner before Henry Stern. Davis wrote to say 
that as the person primarily responsible for the early problems 
at the rink he was “delighted and relieved to see how superbly 
[his] mistakes had been corrected.” I happen to believe that 
Davis was far from the only person responsible. But what 
struck me most about his gracious attitude was how radically it 
contrasted with that of Henry Stern. 

Throughout the Wollman project, Stern took numerous 
opportunities to minimize to reporters what we were 
accomplishing. The Daily News, noting one particularly snide 
comment Stern made, snapped back in an editorial. “Try 
saying thanks, Henry,” they wrote, “It’s more dignified, under 
the circumstances.” 

Koch himself was not exactly effusive about what we’d 
accomplished. Again, I think the media may have been a 
factor. In October, all the local newspapers ran stories that 



surely must have made him a little defensive. The Times, for 
example, ran a lead editorial that began, “New York City 
bungled the job of reopening Wollman Skating Rink for six 
years, wasting millions,” and ended by saying, “The lessons 
of the Wollman Rink ought not to be forgotten.” 

Whenever they were asked, both Koch and Stern told 
reporters that after the job was done, the city intended to meet 
with me, and my people, to see whether the lessons of 
Wollman Rink could be applied to other city projects. If I 
heard them make that statement once, I must have heard it a 
dozen times, including in several speeches on November 13, 
the day we officially opened the rink to the public. 

I’ve yet to get a call from any city official seeking a 
meeting. I can’t honestly say I’m surprised. The bad press has 
died down, and that’s all any of them were really concerned 
about. 

Still, I believe there are some lessons the city could take 
away from what we accomplished at Wollman Rink. At one 
point, Koch offered his own explanation for why we were 
able to do what the city could not. “Trump put in a cushion,” 
Koch said, “and then he was able to reduce it by working as 
hard as he could with an elite crew, who knew that if they 
screwed up the job, they would never work for Donald Trump 
again.” 

That explanation wasn’t totally wrong. What Koch didn’t 
understand is that the city could have done some of the very 



same things I did. I’m not suggesting they would have been 
able to complete the job in five months, as I did, or even in six 
months. But there is no conceivable excuse for not completing 
it in a year, much less for failing for six years. That’s 
incompetence, plain and simple, and incompetence was at the 
heart of this whole sad saga. 

City officials invariably cite two reasons why they can’t 
move as quickly as private developers. The first is that, by 
law, the city must award any contract to the lowest bidder, 
regardless of whether that person is best qualified to do the 
work. There is at least a partial solution. Objective qualifying 
standards ought to be adopted for any bidder on a city job. 
Provable past performance, for example, should be required 
across the board. In addition, any contractor who does good 
work for the city—coming in on time and on budget—ought 
to be given priority on future city jobs. 

The other disadvantage city officials cite is the so-called 
Wicks law. It requires that on any public construction job 
budgeted over $50,000, the work must be divided among at 
least four separate contractors. The law was designed to 
increase competition and reduce building costs, but it does just 
the opposite. No single general contractor is permitted to have 
overall responsibility, and the result is frequent delays, 
disputes, and overruns. 

I don’t deny that these laws put a crimp on the city, but I 
believe a far bigger problem is leadership. 



I know from my own experience that the only way to get 
even the best contractor to finish a job on time and on budget 
is to lean on him very, very hard. You can get any job done 
through sheer force of will—and by knowing what you’re 
talking about. As it is now, a contractor will come in and say 
to a city official, “Pm sorry, but we’ve run into this problem, 
and we’re going to need another one million or two million 
dollars to finish the job.” No one argues back, because 
virtually no one in city government knows anything about 
construction. 

Worst of all, no one in the city government bureaucracy is 
held accountable for failure. I’ll give you what I consider the 
classic example. Back in 1984—by which time the city had 
already spent four years trying to rebuild Wollman Rink—a 
man named Bronson Binger held a press conference. At the 
time, Binger’s title was assistant parks commissioner, and his 
primary responsibility was the renovation of Wollman Rink. 
Binger made a bold, confident announcement to the reporters 
who showed up. If the Wollman isn’t ready to reopen in time 
for next season, he told them, then he’d resign his job. 

A year passed, the rink obviously didn’t reopen, and Binger 
was true to his word. He resigned. There was just one catch. A 
short time later he was named deputy commissioner in charge 
of prison construction for the State of New York. I don’t 
know much about building prisons, but one thing is certain: 
renovating ice rinks is a lot easier. You don’t reward failure 
by promoting those responsible for it, because all you’ll get is 



more failure. 

The one group that does benefit from the city’s 
incompetence are the contractors who do the work. When a 
subway project or a new highway or a bridge goes over 
budget by millions of dollars, contractors clean up. You won’t 
read the names of these people on the Forbes Four Hundred 
and they may not all speak perfect English, but I’ll guarantee 
you this: many of them have become immensely wealthy 
working for New York City. They earn vast sums from huge, 
unwarranted cost overruns that city officials approve—and 
taxpayers underwrite. 

The gala opening celebration for the rink was produced by 
former skating champions Dick Button and Aja Zanova- 
Steindler. They managed to bring together for one show most 
of the world’s best skaters: Peggy Fleming, Dorothy Hamill, 
Scott Hamilton, Debbi Thomas, Robin Cousins, Toller 
Cranston, the teams of Torvill and Dean and Blumberg and 
Seibert, and others. It was a great occasion. 

Had the city then turned over the finished rink to a second- 
rate operator, this story might still have a bad ending. But 
because normal competitive bidding would have led to a new 
delay in opening the rink, the city asked me to operate the rink 
on a temporary basis for the first season. Again, I just looked 
for the best rink managers available. The answer I came up 
with was Ice Capades. Besides doing great ice shows, Ice 
Capades operate some of the best rinks in the country. 



They’ve done an impeccable job with Wollman Rink. It’s 
not only beautifully run, it’s been highly successful. During 
the 1970s, when the rink was still open and run by the city, it 
earned an average gross of approximately $100,000 a year 
and never took in more than $150,000. Although we charged 
prices below those of any private city rink—$4.50 a session 
for adults, $2.50 for children—we earned $1.2 million in 
revenues during our first season. Profits exceeded $500,000 
after expenses, and all of it went to charity and the Parks 
Department. But equally important, more than a half million 
skaters enjoyed the Wollman Rink. 

Even now, as I write this in the spring of 1987, I get a real 
kick every time I look out the window of my living room in 
Trump Tower and see hundreds of skaters on the Wollman 
Rink. However, I won’t be one of them. People have been 
waiting for years to watch me fall, but I’m not about to help 
the cause. Skating isn’t my strong suit. 



13 

COMEBACK 


A West Side Story 


T 


HE TOUGHEST business decision I ever made was giving up 
my option on the West Side yards—seventy-eight 
riverfront acres between 59th Street and 72nd Street— 
in the summer of 1979. The easiest business decision I ever 
made was buying back those same hundred acres in January 
1985. 


I have a tendency to get very enthusiastic about any deal I 
make, but I suspect few people would argue that those 
hundred acres represent the single best undeveloped piece of 
property in America today. 

It has been reported that I paid $95 million for the West 
Side yards, or about $1 million an acre, which is not far from 
the correct figure. Taking the time value of money into 
account, I paid less to purchase the site in 1985 than I would 
have if I’d exercised my option to buy them in 1979. During 
the intervening years, the price of most Manhattan real estate 
increased as much as five times. Even before I put up a single 
building, I’m certain I could sell the property at a very 




substantial profit, and I’ve turned down numerous offers 
already. Consider just one comparison. Very shortly after I 
bought the West Side yards, another group of developers paid 
approximately $500 million for the Columbus Circle Coliseum 
site, a tiny property by comparison, and just four blocks away. 

I got the yards at a great price because a bank was 
foreclosing on a desperate seller, because I made the deal 
before the property was offered for sale on the open market, 
and because I was one of the few developers both willing and 
able to pay millions of dollars a year in carrying costs for as 
long as it took to get the yards developed. 

Securing the option to purchase the West Side yards from 
the Penn Central Railroad back in 1974 was the first major 
deal I made in Manhattan. At the time, as I’ve said, the city 
was on the verge of bankruptcy, and the West Side was hardly 
considered a great place to live. But I had a simple conviction: 
I couldn’t go very wrong buying spectacular riverfront 
property in the middle of Manhattan at a bargain-basement 
price. 

Over the next five years, however, government subsidies 
dried up for the kind of middle-income housing I was 
proposing, community opposition to any development on the 
West Side reached a fever pitch, and banks remained reluctant 
to finance any large-scale developments. Perhaps most 
important, I was launching other projects—among them the 
Commodore/Hyatt, Trump Tower, and my first Atlantic City 



casino. Nor was I eager to load myself down with huge 
carrying costs while my personal resources were still very 
limited. 

By devoting myself to other deals instead, I generated a 
cash flow large enough to support the carrying costs on 
virtually any project. I also built a record of success that made 
banks happy to lend me money for nearly any deal. 

Shortly after I gave up my original option in 1979, the Penn 
Central sold the West Side yards to my friend Abe Hirschfeld. 
Very quickly, Abe went out and got himself a partner on the 
deal. Francisco Macri became wealthy in the 1960s building 
bridges for the government in his native Argentina. Under the 
deal with Hirschfeld, Macri agreed to take over the job totally. 
Hirschfeld retained a substantial percentage of profits but no 
ongoing role in the project. Macri, in turn, gave the job of 
overseeing the project day-to-day to a man named Carlos 
Varsavsky, a former physics professor who’d been running 
Macri’s Argentinian company, BA Capital. 

The Macri team had plenty of brainpower. What they lacked 
was practical experience, especially in New York City, where 
it is so difficult to do any sort of real estate development. 

The first key to developing any huge Manhattan site is 
getting the necessary approvals to build a job that is 
economically viable. Rezoning is a complex, highly political, 
and very time-consuming process that ultimately involves a 
dozen city and state agencies, as well as local community 



groups and politicians. 

Macri did finally manage to get his zoning for the project he 
named Lincoln West. But in the process he made far too many 
concessions to the city. Being forced to sell out may have been 
the best thing that ever happened to him. If Macri had ever 
tried to build the project under the terms to which he’d agreed, 
he would have lost hundreds of millions of dollars. 

It was sad, in a way, because Franco Macri is a wonderful 
and well-meaning man. But he made a critical misjudgment 
from the start: he assumed that in a project as big as the West 
Side yards, he could afford to absorb nearly any costs and still 
end up with a huge profit. The truth is that unless you design a 
project to be self-supporting as you build it, you risk getting 
eaten alive before you’ve turned the corner into profit. 

One of Maori’s problems was that he tried to apply the 
principles of bridge-building to a residential development. 
When you build a bridge, under contract to the government, 
you calculate the costs and sign a contract for a set amount. 
All you need to do to earn a profit is bring the project in on 
budget. In developing real estate, it’s a whole different ball 
game. You can budget building costs, but you can’t truly 
project revenues, because you’re always at the mercy of the 
market. The variables include how much you get per unit, 
how long it takes to sell out, and what your carrying costs are 
along the way. The less you commit to spend up front, the less 
you’re at risk later. 



Instead, Macri spent three years mostly in the business of 
giveaways. The city, eager to get all it could in return for 
approving the project, asked Macri for concession after 
concession. Macri began by agreeing to provide $30 million 
to refurbish the 72nd Street subway station nearest to the 
project—even though the projected renovation amounted to 
little more than widening a single platform by four feet. For 
$30 million, you ought to be able to totally rebuild a station. 

Next, Macri threw in a $5 million pledge for a railroad flat¬ 
car operation in the South Bronx to replace the one he’d be 
eliminating in the West Side yards. Then he promised to chip 
in $30 million for a public park within his development. Later, 
he agreed to build a new public through street connecting with 
the existing city grid—a job that would have surely cost tens 
of millions of dollars. 

When Con Edison asked Macri to underwrite the cost of 
rebuilding a smokestack the company owned on the site, he 
even agreed to that. This I found particularly preposterous. 
Con Edison already gets one of the highest utility rates in the 
country. When I met Macri, I asked him why he’d agreed to 
do anything for Con Ed. Wasn’t it enough, I asked, that over 
the years he was going to be buying billions of dollars worth 
of electricity from them? 

“They told me they were going to oppose my project,” 
Macri explained. “And anyway, what’s the big deal? How 
much can a smokestack cost?” 



Suddenly I understood: Franco Macri hadn’t bothered to 
check. But I did. To put a needle 500 feet into the air, it turns 
out, costs nearly as much as putting up a building. “It could 
run to thirty or even forty million dollars,” I told Macri. He 
still didn’t seem fazed. By the time he’d finished being 
generous to anyone who asked, Marci had committed more 
than $100 million in giveaways. Worse yet, he’d agreed to 
pay in full for much of it before he’d erected any buildings— 
much less sold a single apartment. 

Equally bad was the zoning to which Macri finally agreed. 
By the time the process was finished, he’d been negotiated 
down to less than 4,300 residential units on his hundred-acre 
site—a density lower than you find in some six-story 
apartment complexes in the suburbs. More specifically, Macri 
agreed to build just 850 units in the most valuable part of his 
site—68th Street to 72nd Street—which was adjacent to an 
existing residential neighborhood. The great majority of his 
apartments he agreed to put in the undeveloped industrial 
southern end of the site, where the residential market remained 
totally untested. 

Antidevelopment forces on the Upper West Side barely had 
to fight with Macri. He became his own worst enemy. 

The last major mistake Macri made was that he never set out 
to create any excitement about his Lincoln West project. 
During the four years when he owned this terrific piece of 
property, virtually not a word was written about it. Even the 



name Lincoln West implied that, despite the fact that this 
represented one of the largest and potentially most important 
developments in the United States, it was merely a job located 
west of Lincoln Center. 

An average 150-unit luxury high-rise building in New York 
takes two years to sell out—and that assumes a strong market 
and good promotion. To sell literally thousands of units in a 
new development requires that you have both something 
unique to sell and a very aggressive approach to selling it. 
Macri had neither. The Lincoln West development he had 
proposed—two dozen relatively short brick buildings—was as 
bland and uninspiring as any of a dozen public housing 
projects that were thrown up around Manhattan during the 
1960s. It was scarcely surprising that not one of at least a 
dozen banks Macri called on over three years was willing to 
lend him money for his construction, even though banks were 
practically throwing money at dozens of other New York City 
developments. 

By late 1983, Macri also had personal cash problems. The 
war in the Falklands apparently had hurt his business interests 
in Argentina. By this point, counting outlays for architectural 
staff, environmental-impact studies, and carrying costs, Macri 
was probably in to Lincoln West for more than $100 million. 
Caught in a crunch, he began defaulting on the original loan 
he’d taken from Chase Manhattan to purchase the land. 

In the spring of 1984 I got a call from Abe Hirschfeld. He 



told me that Maori was in trouble and was interested in selling. 
I went to see Maori, and we began a long negotiation. He was 
eager to get out with a profit. At the same time, the bank was 
breathing down his neck. Sure enough, in November, we 
finally agreed to an all-cash price of approximately $100 
million, and Chase agreed to finance a good part of the 
transaction. 

One of the reasons Franco Macri agreed to sell to me, I’m 
convinced, is that I’d done him a favor long before we finally 
made a deal. Shortly after our first meeting in early 1984, we 
agreed on the terms of a tentative deal under which Macri 
would sell me the project. He wasn’t yet certain that he wanted 
to sell, but he was willing to consider signing at least a letter of 
intent. One of the first things that anyone should learn about 
real estate—and New York real estate in particular—is never 
to sign a letter of intent. Years can be spent in court trying to 
get out of a seemingly simple and “nonbinding” agreement. 

Macri did not fully realize this, and in addition, my lawyer, 
Jerry Schrager, drafted a letter of intent that was significantly 
more binding than most. 

It was with an eye to getting this letter signed that Jerry and 
I sat down in mid-1984, in an extraordinary apartment at the 
Sherry Netherland Hotel, along with Macri, his young son, 
and a beautiful interpreter named Christina. She was a true 
Latin beauty, and all of us were somewhat distracted. I’ll 
never forget Christina’s stopping in the middle of translating a 



complex legal point and saying to Macri, “You really should 
get a lawyer to help you understand the meaning of this 
document. It’s very complicated.” 

“No, no, Christina,” he said. “As long as I can get out of it, 
it’s not so important.” And he went ahead and signed. 

As it turned out, Macri retained his dream of proceeding 
with the project, and several months later he called and asked 
me to let him rescind his letter of intent. I declined, but he 
asked if we could meet, and I agreed. 

Macri explained that the project was killing him, but that he 
desperately wanted to make one last effort to get his financing 
and move forward. I couldn’t help feeling sympathetic, 
having spent years myself working to launch difficult projects. 
I also appreciated his openness. 

I took the letter of intent out of a folder and tore it in two, in 
front of Macri. And then I said to him, “If you should ever 
again decide to sell, I hope you’ll think of me first. In the 
meantime, good luck.” 

When I told Schrager what I’d done, he wasn’t happy, but 
to this day I’m convinced that my ripping up that letter— 
which may or may not have been binding—is the reason that 
Macri did come back to me, instead of going to any of a dozen 
other potential bidders, when it finally became clear that he 
couldn’t get his financing after all. 

Even before I signed the purchase papers in January 1985, I 



had the basic elements of my plan in mind, I intended to build 
many fewer buildings than Macri, and all along a single block. 
Views were the site’s single strongest selling point, and I 
wanted every apartment to have unobstructed views either of 
the Hudson River to the west, the extraordinary cityscape to 
the east, or both. I also intended to build much taller buildings 
than Macri had planned, to take full advantage of the views 
and also because I believed tall buildings would make the 
project more majestic and alluring. 

I also envisioned a huge retail shopping promenade on the 
ground level, along the riverfront in front of the buildings. 
What the Upper West Side of Manhattan needs more than 
anything else, I believe, is basic shopping services—large 
supermarkets, shoe stores, pharmacies, and hardware stores. 
Rents along Broadway, Amsterdam Avenue, and Columbus 
Avenue have gotten so high that small shopkeepers have been 
driven out. It’s easier today to find a $100 pair of leather 
gloves on Columbus Avenue than a loaf of bread. One 
advantage of my low land cost is that I will be able to charge 
more reasonable rents to retail tenants. 

My plans were contingent, of course, on what sort of 
zoning I could get. I didn’t have to undertake complex cost 
analyses to know that the only way to make the project 
feasible was to get approval for many more units and total 
square feet of buildable space than Macri got. Unlike Macri, I 
was prepared to hold out for as long as it took—even into 
another city administration if necessary—to win approval for a 



plan I believe can be economically workable. 

My first goal was to put as much distance as possible 
between Maori’s approved project and my own vision for the 
site. Any link to his project could only hurt me. 

At the time he sold to me, Macri had yet to sign any formal 
contract with the city, and the city had yet to issue him a final 
building permit. I was under no obligation, therefore, to 
deliver on his many promises. Starting the process over from 
scratch meant I’d have to spend much more time and money, 
but I felt there was no other choice. 

My first critical challenge was to make the project exciting 
and attractive to the city so that they’d be inclined to give me 
the zoning approvals I needed. The key was to find a mutual 
interest. Deals work best when each side gets something it 
wants from the other. By luck, I picked up the newspaper one 
morning soon after purchasing the site, and the answer came 
to me. It turned out that NBC, which had long had 
headquarters in Rockefeller Center, was looking to relocate. 
Edward S. Gordon, a top New York real estate broker, then 
confirmed this to me. Among the possibilities NBC had in 
mind was a move across the river to New Jersey, where they 
stood to save considerable money by virtue of that state’s 
lower taxes and land costs. 

For the city to lose any large company is obviously bad, but 
there could hardly be a worse blow than losing NBC. Pure 
economics are part of the issue. The city’s economic 



development agency has estimated that if NBC moves, it will 
cost New York some 4,000 jobs, and perhaps $500 million a 
year in revenues. 

The psychological loss would be at least as great. It’s one 
thing to lose a manufacturing company no one has ever heard 
of. It’s another to lose a company that is a crucial part of what 
makes New York the media capital of the world. The two 
other networks, ABC and CBS, now produce nearly all their 
programs in Los Angeles. NBC still does the Today show, the 
NBC Nightly News, Late Night with David Letterman, The 
Cosby Show, Saturday Night Live, and other shows from New 
York. You can’t put a specific dollar value on the excitement 
and glamour of being home to the number-one network and 
its top-rated shows. It’s like trying to assess what New York 
would be like without the Empire State Building or the Statue 
of Liberty. 

With the West Side yards, I had something to offer NBC 
that no other New York developer could possibly match: 
enough space to build huge single-story studios in the style of 
Hollywood backlots. NBC was making do at Rockefeller 
Center with a cramped 1.2 million square feet of space. On my 
site, I could offer them 2 million square feet, as well as room 
for future expansion, and I’d still have plenty of room left 
over to build the rest of the project I had in mind. 

In addition, because my land costs had been so low, I was 
in a position to offer NBC a price per square foot far below 



what they might otherwise get in New York. Even at that, to 
be truly competitive with a New Jersey offer, I knew I’d need 
a tax abatement from the city. But I also knew that it was in 
the city’s economic interest to provide incentives for NBC to 
stay. 

The more I thought about it, the better I liked the idea. Even 
if NBC ultimately decided not to move to my site, it was still a 
perfect place to build television and motion picture studios. 
With or without NBC, I felt studios would be a good, high- 
profile business. Before I got a commitment from the network, 
I decided to design my project around the studio concept. The 
first step was the name: Television City. 

My second challenge was to find a way to immediately 
capture the public imagination with my project. The more 
awareness and excitement I could create early on, the easier it 
was going to be to attract buyers down the line. A lot of 
developers build first and promote later, if at all. 

The world’s tallest building was a project I’d considered 
undertaking even before I purchased the West Side yards. I’ve 
always loved very tall buildings. I remember coming in from 
Brooklyn as a kid with my father and pleading with him to 
take us to see the Empire State Building, which at the time was 
the world’s tallest building. But then Chicago built the Sears 
Tower and took away the tide. I loved the challenge of 
bringing the world’s tallest building back to New York, where 
I felt it really belonged. 



In a way, I saw the building as a loss leader. When you 
build any structure higher than about 50 stories, the 
construction costs escalate geometrically. If maximum profit is 
your sole motive, you’re far better off putting up three 50- 
story towers than one 150-story skyscraper. On the other 
hand, I felt the building would ultimately pay for itself as a 
tourist attraction and an overall lure. After all, how many 
millions of tourists have come, as I once did, to see the Empire 
State Building? 

The next challenge was to find an architect who was as 
enthusiastic as I was about making such a building the 
centerpiece of this project. In the end, I interviewed only two 
architects. The first was Richard Meier, who represents the 
epitome of the New York architectural establishment. Critics 
adore Meier, and he has a big following. But what I 
discovered very quickly is that Meier is not the sort of guy 
who jumps in with great energy and enthusiasm. He prefers to 
spend time pondering and analyzing and theorizing. For 
weeks, I waited for him to bring me a scale model of a plan, 
or at least some preliminary drawings. Nothing came. 

In the meantime, I also met with Helmut Jahn. I liked him 
for very different reasons than I liked Meier. Jahn was an 
outsider: German-born, Chicago-based, in no way part of the 
New York architectural establishment. He was a bit of a dandy 
personally, a very good promoter, and he’d gotten very good 
notices for some very daring work. Among other things, Jahn 
designed the Xerox Center in downtown Chicago and the 



high-tech State of Illinois building. At the time I talked with 
him, he had four major buildings under way in midtown 
Manhattan. 

What I liked most about Helmut was that he believed, as I 
did, that big can be beautiful. He liked spectacle. Less than 
three weeks after we first talked, he arrived in my office with a 
scale model of a project that incorporated the basic elements 
I’d told him I wanted, as well as several of his own. In the 
summer of 1985, I hired Jahn to be the project’s chief 
architect. 

By the fall, we’d batted back and forth a dozen possible 
designs for the site. Both of us felt that the site was so big and 
so distinctive that it made no sense to try to create something 
that blended into the surrounding community. Instead, we saw 
this as a chance to build a self-contained city, with a look and 
a character wholly distinct from the disparate surrounding 
neighborhoods. 

On November 18, we held a press conference to announce 
our plan for the site. For years, while Macri pursued his 
Lincoln West plan, the media had ignored him. This time, no 
fewer than fifty reporters—local and national—showed up for 
our announcement. I ran down the basic elements. We were 
calling it Television City, and we hoped to lure NBC as our 
prime tenant. We intended to build a mixed-use development 
totaling 18.5 million square feet of commercial, residential, 
and retail space. The project would include approximately 



8,000 residential units, 3.5 million square feet of TV and 
motion-picture studios and offices, 1.7 million square feet of 
retail space, 8,500 parking spaces, and almost forty acres of 
parks and open space, including a thirteen-block waterfront 
promenade. At the center of the site, we’d erect the world’s 
tallest building—1,670 feet high—or about 200 feet higher 
than the Sears Tower in Chicago. 

To me, the beauty of the plan was its simplicity and its 
grandeur. In addition to the world’s tallest building, we’d put 
up just seven other buildings—three at the north end, four at 
the south. A decked-over three-level platform in front of the 
buildings—including parking and enclosed shopping—would 
permit us to put a pedestrian promenade on top, at a level 
slightly higher than the adjacent West Side Highway. The 
result would be to provide an unimpeded view of the river 
from virtually any spot on the site. We’d also have enormous 
space for parks. In all, our proposal was about 50 percent 
bigger than Macri’s—but even at that, the overall density was 
lower than that of many smaller developments squeezed onto 
tiny midtown sites. 

Most reporters, I find, have very little interest in exploring 
the substance of a detailed proposal for a development. They 
look instead for the sensational angle. In this case, that may 
have worked to my advantage. I was prepared for questions 
about density and traffic and the mix of housing on the site, 
but instead, all the reporters wanted to talk about was the 
world’s tallest building. It gave the project an instant 



mystique. When I got home that night, I switched on the CBS 
Evening News, expecting to hear news from the opening of the 
summit between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev. Dan 
Rather was in Geneva anchoring the program, but after 
summarizing the day’s developments, suddenly he was 
saying: “In New York City today, developer Donald Trump 
announced plans to build the world’s tallest building.” It 
demonstrated how powerful and intoxicating a symbol I’d 
found for my project. 

The reaction to the world’s tallest building was hardly 
uniformly positive, but I fully expected that. The controversy 
actually helped keep the project in the news. Critics insisted 
that such a building was unnecessary, that people wouldn’t 
want to live up so high, and that I’d never be able to build it 
anyway. Newsweek did a full-page story about the building, 

headlined DONALD TRUMP’S LOFTY AMBITION The New York Times ran an 

editorial about my plan, which probably added to its 
credibility. “Time alone,” the editorial said, “can distinguish 
between great dreams and vain illusions. It’s too early to 
know which describes Donald Trump’s desire to loom over 
New York and all other cityscapes with a 150-story tower.” 

My favorite reaction to the world’s tallest building came 
from columnist George Will. I’ve always liked Will, in part 
because he’s not afraid to challenge fashion. “Donald Trump 
is not being reasonable,” Will wrote. “But, then, man does not 
live by reason alone, fortunately. Trump, who believes that 
excess can be a virtue, is as American as Manhattan’s skyline, 



which expresses the Republic’s erupting energies. He says the 
superskyscraper is necessary because it is unnecessary. He 
believes architectural exuberance is good for us [and] he may 
have a point. Brashness, zest and elan are part of this 
country’s character.” 

My only regret was that George Will didn’t have a seat on 
the City Planning Commission. 

To my surprise, as time passed, opposition to the world’s 
tallest building seemed to diminish. Critics focused instead on 
other aspects of the development, which I’d expected to be 
less controversial. In particular, the Times architecture critic, 
Paul Goldberger, launched something of a crusade against 
Television City. A week after I announced my plans, 
Goldberger wrote a long piece entitled “Is Trump’s Latest 
Proposal Just a Castle in the Air?” His major criticism, aside 
from the fact that he simply doesn’t like tall buildings, was 
that the project hadn’t been sufficiently integrated into the rest 
of the neighborhood. 

That, of course, was precisely what I liked best about it. The 
worst thing I could do, I was convinced, was to build 
something that blended into the surroundings. Ten years 
earlier, I’d taken the same position on the rebuilding of the 
Commodore/Hyatt Hotel. The Grand Central neighborhood 
was dying, and I felt the only chance at success was to build a 
spectacular new hotel sheathed in reflective glass, so that it 
stood apart from the dull, older buildings in the 



neighborhood. The hotel became an enormous success, and 
eventually even the critics came around. Reading Goldberger, 
I felt I was reliving the Commodore experience. 

I felt certain I’d get far better reviews from Paul Goldberger 
and certain other critics simply by cutting my buildings in half 
and making them look more like the better-known prewar 
buildings on the West Side. The problem was that my project 
would no longer be majestic or distinctive, and it wouldn’t 
sell. It irritates me that critics, who’ve neither designed nor 
built anything themselves, are given carte blanche to express 
their views in the pages of major publications, whereas the 
targets of their criticism are almost never offered space to 
respond. Of course, I can be irritated all I want and it won’t do 
any good. So long as a critic writes for a newspaper like the 
New York Times , his opinion will continue to carry great 
weight—whether I like it or not. 

By the spring of 1986, the project we’d proposed was at 
something of a standstill with city planning. Much of the 
explanation was that city government itself had become almost 
completely paralyzed, under the mayoral administration of Ed 
Koch. 

Koch has achieved something quite miraculous. He’s 
presided over an administration that is both pervasively 
corrupt and totally incompetent. Richard Daley, the former 
mayor of Chicago, managed to survive corruption scandals 
because at least he seemed able to operate his city efficiently. 



Under Koch, the problem of the homeless has grown far 
worse, the vast majority of the city remains unwired for cable, 
highways have gone unrepaired, subway tunnels have been 
left unfinished, companies have continued to flee to other 
cities and city services have deteriorated inexorably. 

Meanwhile, no fewer than a dozen Koch appointees and 
cohorts have been indicted on charges of bribery, perjury, and 
accepting kickbacks, or have been forced to resign in disgrace 
after admitting various ethical transgressions. The criminally 
indicted include Jay Turoff, the former head of the Taxi and 
Limousine Commission, John McLaughlin, the hospitals chief, 
and Anthony Ameruso, the former transportation 
commissioner. Victor Botnick, one of Koch’s closest personal 
advisers, quit after it was revealed that he’d lied about his 
educational background and had taken numerous unnecessary 
trips under the pretext of doing city business. Bess Myerson, 
the cultural affairs commissioner and one of Koch’s best 
friends, resigned in disgrace and was eventually indicted after 
it came out that she’d given a job to the daughter of a judge 
she was seeking to influence and had then lied repeatedly 
about her involvement. Later it came out that Koch ignored 
evidence that Myerson had acted improperly. 

The irony is that Koch made his reputation by boasting 
about his integrity and incorruptibility. It doesn’t seem to 
occur to him that if the people he appoints prove to be corrupt, 
then in the end he must take the responsibility. To the 
contrary, at the first hint that any of his friends might be in 



trouble, Koch can’t run fast enough the other way. For 
example, when his close friend Donald Manes, the late Queens 
borough president, came under investigation and tried to 
commit suicide, Koch immediately called him “a crook,” even 
though Manes had yet to be indicted for anything. At the time, 
Manes was recovering in a hospital. Weeks later, he did 
succeed in killing himself. 

As for the Koch appointees who managed to avoid criminal 
indictment, the scandal is their sheer incompetence. Many just 
lack talent. Others seem to have concluded that the safest 
approach to protecting their jobs is to stop making decisions 
of any kind; at least then they can’t be accused of breaking the 
law. The problem is that when officials in a huge city 
government stop making decisions, you get the bureaucratic 
equivalent of gridlock. Dishonesty is intolerable, but inaction 
and incompetence can be every bit as bad. 

In any case, the city was also stonewalling my project as a 
means of trying to force me to make changes. In my view it 
was a form of economic blackmail. So long as I resisted their 
ideas, they held up my approvals, and my costs mounted. 

Specifically, city planning wanted me to provide more 
direct access to the waterfront, add more east-west streets 
connecting the project to the existing city street grid, and 
move the world’s tallest building south, away from the 
existing residential neighborhoods. I disagreed with their 
suggestions, but I also recognize that zoning is always a matter 



of negotiation. As hard as I push, in the end I’m practical. If it 
took making some compromises to get the project moving 
forward, and the result didn’t undermine the project’s 
economic viability, I was prepared to make the changes. 

In March, I decided to move the location of the world’s 
tallest building south to 63rd Street. The people at city 
planning were immediately more enthusiastic. Around the 
same time, the New York Times had made public an 
environmental-impact study of the site. Some of its 
conclusions, I felt, would ultimately help my cause. I’d always 
believed that any concerns about density were unwarranted. In 
truth, the West Side of Manhattan is relatively underpopulated. 
According to the census, the area declined in population from 
245,000 in 1960 to 204,000 in 1980. Only 3,100 new 
apartments went up in the neighborhood between 1980 and 
1984. Adding several thousand more hardly represents 
development run amok. 

The study also pointed out several benefits that would come 
from the project. For example, the study predicted that the 
West Side would gain business worth at least $500 million a 
year from new residents, as well as tens of thousands of jobs, 
both during construction and permanently on the site. 
Providing jobs, in my view, is a far more constructive solution 
to unemployment than creating welfare programs. Finally, the 
study found that any added vehicular congestion in the area— 
a major concern among some critics—could be eased by 
improvements in local subways and the addition of a jitney 



service, which I’d already proposed. 

Even after moving the location of the world’s tallest 
building, I began to believe that I might also have to make a 
change in architects. I liked the fact that Helmut Jahn was an 
outsider, but I think it hurt us with the people at city planning. 
No one at the commission ever seemed quite comfortable with 
Helmut. It was never anything more specific than that, but in 
the end I felt that was enough. If the project was going to 
move forward, there had to be some spirit of cooperation. 
Reluctantly, I decided to make a change. 

A lot of people were surprised that I chose Alex Cooper. 
Even more than Richard Meier, Cooper was Jahn’s antithesis. 
Legendarily civic-minded, he’d built his reputation as an 
urban planner, served five years on the City Planning 
Commission, and helped write the rules of the planning 
process I was now going through. Along with his partner at 
the time, Stanton Eckstut, Cooper had just finished work on 
the master plan for a development at the southern tip of 
Manhattan called Battery Park. The critics loved it, calling it a 
classic example of enlightened urban architecture. 

I wasn’t a total fan of the Battery Park project myself. For 
example, while the project was situated on the waterfront, 
many of its apartments faced other buildings and therefore had 
no water views at all. In addition, I felt that a number of the 
buildings were totally undistinguished architecturally. 
However, Cooper’s contributions to the master plan—the 



placement of streets, parks, and other amenities—I did like, 
and I felt he could bring some of those ideas to our site. 

I had first interviewed Cooper in October 198S, shortly 
before going public with the Helmut Jahn plan for the site. 
There were already indications that the city might have 
problems with the way we’d designed our open space, and I 
was interested in hiring Cooper to work with Jahn just on that. 
Working together didn’t appeal to either of them, however, so 
I put the idea on the back burner. 

I called Cooper again in May 1986 and offered him the 
chance to take over sole responsibility for the Television City 
job. In my opinion, he was the guy best positioned to get my 
project moving forward. As for him, although we might have 
been on different sides of the fence in the past, what smart, 
ambitious architect could pass up such an opportunity? 
Television City was probably the best and most challenging 
design job available anywhere. It was about time, I challenged 
Alex, that he got associated with something big and bold, 
instead of small and precious. To his credit, Alex jumped at 
the opportunity. “My God,” he told a reporter later, “it’s three 
quarters of a mile of Hudson frontage, so you don’t lightly 
just walk away.” 

We had our differences, but I quickly discovered that Alex 
had far grander instincts than many people realized, and we 
got along better professionally than most people assumed we 
would. Alex added more streets and pedestrian walkways 



providing direct access through the project to the waterfront. 
He designed parks that were easily reached by anyone coming 
from outside. We agreed to increase the number of buildings 
and to make each one a little smaller. In front of the taller 
buildings, Alex added townhouses as a way of varying the 
scale. 

What Alex didn’t do was substantially reduce the amount of 
overall square footage below what I believed was necessary to 
ensure the project’s economic viability. Still, his changes 
plainly had an impact. Suddenly we started getting more 
positive feedback from city planning. When we unveiled the 
plan publicly on October 23, 1986, even our toughest critics 
were more enthusiastic than they’d been about the original 
plan. The head of the local community board, John Kowal, 
still objected to the superskyscraper, but he described Alex’s 
new approach as a “brilliant answer to Trump’s desires” and 
“a far better plan.” 

Cooper himself, who’d been skeptical of the size of the 
project at first, grew more enthusiastic as he got more 
involved in the design. In April 1987, he told the New York 
Times, “I hope that the project can be dealt with on its merits. 
The problem is that the antidevelopment spirit in this city is 
very, very strong right now. What we are trying to do at 
Television City is different. There is room by the river, and we 
are providing a level of public amenity that makes this 
immense size justifiable—parks, waterfront promenades and 
so forth. The world’s tallest building demands an 



extraordinary situation. But if there is any place that such a 
skyscraper makes sense, it is here.” 

I couldn’t have said it better myself. 

As for attracting NBC to the site, I felt our cause got a boost 
when General Electric purchased RCA—owner of NBC—in 
mid-1986. I knew Jack Welch, Jr., the chairman of GE, and 
he struck me as a brilliant big thinker who would immediately 
see the advantage of locating NBC on a site like Television 
City. Welch went on to name Bob Wright, one of his top GE 
executives, to head NBC, and I got the same feeling about 
Wright. They are exceptional men—even if they don’t choose 
my site. 

At the time GE took over, NBC had been actively 
considering no less than four New York City sites, in addition 
to the one in New Jersey. In January 1987, NBC announced 
that aside from the possibility of remaining at Rockefeller 
Center, they’d narrowed their choice to just two sites: ours and 
the marshland owned by Hartz Mountain Industries in 
Secaucus, New Jersey. Eliminated from the competition were 
three other New York City sites. 

The result was to make the issue very simple: either NBC 
came to my site, or they moved to New Jersey. The city had 
already announced a willingness to offer NBC tax 
concessions, mostly in the form of property tax abatements, as 
an inducement for the network to remain in New York. The 
question now was whether they’d offer a package competitive 



with New Jersey’s proposal. 

Incredibly, the city seemed content to sit back and do 
nothing. I say incredible because in early 1987, Mobil Oil, one 
of the largest corporations in the world, announced that it was 
abandoning New York and moving to Virginia. A short time 
later, J. C. Penney, another huge employer, revealed that it too 
was leaving, and taking along many thousands of jobs. You’d 
think the city, faced with yet a third big company threatening 
to leave, would spring to action. Not under Ed Koch, 
however. 

In late February 1987, the Daily News ran an editorial that I 
thought captured the dilemma perfectly. After suggesting that 
the loss of NBC would be “a major blow to the city—an 
enormous loss of jobs, revenues and prestige,” the editorial 
addressed the significance of my site. “Television City is far 
from a certainty,” it said. “The project must work its way 
through the city approval process, where anything from 
bureaucratic inertia to political cowardice can kill it. That’s not 
a case for City Hall’s blindly accepting Trump’s plan in to to. 
But it is an argument for swiftness and efficiency in making 
crucial yes-or-no decisions. The goal of city policy must be to 
keep NBC home. The worst possible result would be to lose it 
to cowardice.” 

In my view, that’s precisely what was happening. Early in 
May 1987, I went to the city with a proposal for a tax- 
abatement program that would make it possible for me to offer 



NBC a deal competitive with New Jersey’s. Alair Townsend, 
the city’s head of economic development, had said herself that 
without abatement, NBC stood to save up to $2 billion over a 
twenty-year period by moving to New Jersey. 

I suggested a deal under which I’d build NBC’s 
headquarters myself, at a cost of between $300 million and 
$400 million. I’d also subsidize NBC’s rent for thirty years by 
charging only $15 a square foot, which is less than half the 
break-even rent. Finally, I’d agree to give to the city 25 
percent of any profits Television City earned for a period of 
forty years. In return, I’d get a twenty-year tax abatement on 
my entire site. Even then, my savings would begin only when 
I got the project up, which was years away, at best. In the 
meantime, I’d be subsidizing NBC out of my own pocket, to 
the tune of at least $30 million a year. 

Ironically, there was almost total opposition to my offer 
within my own organization. Robert, Harvey Freeman, and 
Norman Levine felt that for me to agree to give NBC $30 
million a year in subsidies before we knew what revenues 
we’d be earning was too great a risk. My feeling was that the 
risk was worth taking. A tax abatement for our residential 
apartments would make them more marketable. In addition, 
NBC would be a prestigious addition to the site, and a lure. 
For the city, it was no-lose: they put up no money at all to 
keep NBC, and in lieu of taxes they’d share a substantial 
percentage of any profits we ultimately earned. 



My proposal sparked the first serious negotiations we’d had 
with the city. Ed Koch didn’t participate, but the city officials 
under him seemed receptive to the general structure of the 
plan. On May 25, however, after more than three weeks of 
intense negotiations, Ed Koch turned the deal down cold. I’m 
convinced that he made the determination not on the merits, 
but rather because he didn’t want to make any deal with me— 
no matter how good it was for the city. 

The next day I wrote Koch a letter that I’d held off writing 
for more than a year. “Dear Ed,” it said, “Your attitude on 
keeping NBC in New York City is unbelievable and, I predict, 
will lead to NBC leaving the city, as so many other major 
companies have, for New Jersey.” I again ran down the 
benefits of keeping the network, and ended by saying, “I am 
tired of sitting back quietly and watching New Jersey and 
other states drain the lifeblood out of New York.” 

Koch replied exactly the way I expected him to. He refused 
to respond to my specific points, and he tried to turn the issue 
into a personal contest of wills—Koch, the great protector, 
against Trump, the greedy developer. For months, he’d been 
looking for a way to get back at me for embarrassing him by 
building Wollman Rink so quickly and efficiently. The West 
Side yards, he apparently decided, was the perfect vehicle. 
When I came back with yet another suggestion for saving 
NBC—selling nine acres of my site at below my cost directly 
to the city—Koch rejected it without so much as a discussion. 



I can’t say I was surprised when the New York Times came 
out against my plan. The writer of the editorial was longtime 
Koch ally Herb Sturz. Until joining the Times editorial board 
only a few weeks earlier, Sturz had been head of the City 
Planning Commission, with specific responsibility for 
Television City. In my view, letting Herb Sturz write editorials 
about New York City is analogous to permitting Caspar 
Weinberger to write editorials about Reagan’s military policy. 

I did get strong editorial support, however, from the Daily 
News. “The mayor is correct in saying there are limits to how 
much the city can give NBC,” the News wrote. “But that’s no 
excuse for inaction. Koch should personally bring together the 
decision-makers from NBC, Rockefeller Center and Trump’s 
outfit. He should lay out a strong plan—and knock heads if 
that’s what it takes.” 

Instead, Koch offered NBC a half-assed, watered-down tax- 
abatement proposal, which he said they could apply at any 
Manhattan site they chose. He even offered a little free advice 
about some new sites they might consider. Free advice, of 
course, tends to be worth what you pay for it. No sooner did 
Koch make his suggestion than an NBC spokesman said the 
network wasn’t interested in considering more sites. In the 
meantime, the executives at Hartz Mountain Industries weren’t 
sitting idly by. Recognizing an opportunity to force NBC’s 
hand, they announced on June 1 that the network had thirty 
days to accept the terms that they were offering and which 
New York was no longer willing to match. 



There were some who told me that I was hurting my 
chances for zoning approval by taking on Koch in the media. 
They may well have been right. But I felt there was a bigger 
issue at stake. I’ve come to believe Ed Koch is so incompetent 
and destructive to New York that someone has to stand up and 
say so, publicly. When the Daily News polled its readers as to 
whether they agreed with Koch’s position on NBC or with 
mine, the results were very satisfying. Nearly 10,000 readers 
sided with me. Only 1,800 went with Koch. 

I’ve waited a long time to build on the West Side, and I can 
wait longer to get the zoning I feel is necessary. In the end, I 
will build Television City with or without NBC and with or 
without the current administration. 

I continue to keep all my other options open too, because, 
as I’ve said, it’s the only way you truly protect yourself. If the 
residential real estate market remains strong, I’ll undoubtedly 
do very well selling large, riverview apartments in that 
location. If the market generally falls—and that can only be 
temporary in a city like New York—I may choose to build 
only the shopping complex. I’ll do very, very well just with 
that. 

My time—and Television City’s—will come. I’m lucky that 
I can afford to wait, because that way I’ll be able to do it right. 
The one thing I know is that I’ll be doing business in New 
York City long after Ed Koch has moved out of Gracie 
Mansion. 



14 

THE WEEK THAT WAS 


How the Deals Came Out 


1 SAID AT THE START that I do it to do it. But in the end, you’re 

measured not by how much you undertake but by what 
you finally accomplish. What follows is an accounting of 
how the deals that crossed my desk in the week I chose to 
describe have since turned out. 




Holiday Inns 


Several weeks after selling my Holiday stake for a profit, 
which was substantial but not the reported $35 million, I 
began purchasing stock in another casino company, Bally 
Manufacturing Corporation. In a short time, I accumulated 9.9 
percent of the stock. Bally responded by adopting poison pill 
provisions aimed at thwarting any attempt at a hostile 
takeover. When they also sued to try to keep me from buying 
any more stock, I countersued. 

Two days after I initiated my suit, Bally announced an 
agreement to purchase the Golden Nugget casino at the 
highest price ever for an Atlantic City casino, almost $500 
million, including the cost of the bonds. Once again, the real 
goal seemed to be to thwart me. No company is legally 
permitted to own more than three casinos in Atlantic City, and 
if I took over Bally after they’d purchased the Golden Nugget, 
I’d own four. 

In effect, however, they put me in a win-win position. By 
paying such a huge price for the Nugget, Bally could only 
serve to increase the value of all casinos in town, including the 
two I already owned. 

In the end, Bally offered me a settlement I couldn’t refuse. I 
agreed not to stand in the way of their purchase of the Nugget. 
In return, they agreed to buy back my 9.9 percent stake in 
their company at an average price much higher than I paid, 
giving me a profit on my brief investment of more than $20 



million. 

In March 1987 I made my third attempt to purchase a 
casino company, Resorts International, but this time on a 
friendly basis. In the wake of the death of Resorts founder 
James Crosby, several other parties had launched bids for the 
company, but none had been successful. In the meantime, I’d 
developed a close relationship with several members of 
Resorts who controlled the company. In April 1987 I came to 
an agreement with the family to buy or tender for 93 percent 
of the voting stock in the company at $135 per share. 

Several other bidders subsequently offered a higher price, 
but the family stuck by our agreement. Among other things, 
they believed I was the bidder with the best credentials to 
complete construction on Jim Crosby’s pet project, the Taj 
Mahal on the Boardwalk. Designed as the largest and most 
lavish hotel-casino in the world, the Taj Mahal had already 
gone many millions of dollars over budget and was still 
nowhere near completion at the time Crosby died. 

I hope to have the Taj open by October 1988. In order to 
create a more efficient operation, I may close the casino in the 
existing Resorts facility adjacent to the Taj Mahal and use it to 
service the Taj. Of course, I could always sell it to another 
casino operator for the right price. Who knows? Maybe Bally 
or Holiday Inns might be interested. 



Annabel Hill 


We ended up raising more than $100,000 for the Annabel Hill 
fund, which we used to pay off her mortgage and save her 
farm. To celebrate, we flew Mrs. Hill and her daughter to New 
York, where we held Trump Tower atrium’s first—and, I 
suspect, its last—mortgage-burning ceremony. 



United States Football League 


The owners voted unanimously to appeal the ruling under 
which the USFL was awarded just one dollar in damages, 
despite the jury’s antitrust finding against the National 
Football League. I think the grounds for an appeal are as 
strong as our original case. 



Wo liman Rink 


The rink came in at $750,000 under budget and opened a full 
month ahead of schedule in November 1986. More than a half 
million skaters enjoyed the rink during the first year. Before 
the opening the city predicted a major operating loss. For the 
first full season of operation, we earned almost $500,000 in 
profits—all of which went to charity. 



Palm Beach Towers 


Lee Iacocca became my partner in the purchase of two 
condominium towers in the Palm Beach area, which we 
bought for approximately $40 million. When we took over the 
project, only a few units had been sold. In a short period of 
time, operating in a glutted market for condominiums in 
southern Florida, we sold or sale/leased nearly fifty units and 
managed to turn a bankrupt operation into a big success story. 
During the next year we intend to open a major restaurant on 
the ground level of one of the towers. Among those who’ve 
bid for the space are the owners of the 21 Club in New York, 
and Harry Cipriani, owner of Harry’s Bar. Sir Charles 
Goldstein was dismissed as counsel to Lee before the deal was 
concluded. 



The Australian Casino 


Although we were among the finalists being considered to 
operate the second-largest casino in the world (after the Taj 
Mahal in Atlantic City), I thought better of it at the last 
moment. The idea of running a business which is a twenty- 
four-hour plane trip from New York City just didn’t make 
sense—particularly when I have so much to occupy my 
attention in my own backyard. Shortly before the decision was 
to be announced by officials in New South Wales, I let them 
know that I was withdrawing my bid. 



The Beverly Hills Hotel 


The hotel was finally sold to the highest bidder, oilman 
Marvin Davis, for a price far in excess of what I was willing 
to pay. After having the property inspected, I kept my own 
bid low. Of course, should Davis ever choose to sell, I’m sure 
he’ll earn a profit. 

Marvin Davis subsequently became (me of the bidders for 
Resorts International as well. After I’d already made my deal, 
he not only offered a higher price but also tried to get the 
Murphy and Crosby families to renege on their agreement 
with me. They refused, and the court approved my deal, after 
which the New Jersey Casino Control Commission also 
approved it by a 5-0 vote. 

Right around the same time, I happened to be at a fabulous 
party in California thrown by Merv Adelson and Barbara 
Walters, and a reporter asked me about Marvin Davis’s bid for 
Resorts. Kiddingly, I said that Davis, who happens to be 
terribly overweight, should focus on losing 200 pounds 
instead of wasting time trying to break my deal with Resorts. I 
heard later that Davis was incensed by my remark, but I can’t 
say I felt bad. I don’t go out of my way to be cordial to 


enemies. 



The Parking Garage 


In October 1986, several months after construction on our 
new parking garage had begun, I got an emergency call one 
morning, just before I was scheduled to make a speech to a 
group of businessmen in New York. My construction 
manager, Tom Pippett, was calling. It seemed that the operator 
of a huge megaton crane had reached his boom out too far for 
a pickup, and the result was the crane and a twenty-two-ton 
beam toppled over onto the garage. Pippett told me that a huge 
section of the garage had literally collapsed. “What about the 
workers?” I asked. “Was anyone hurt?” 

He told me that at least a hundred men had been working on 
the site and that a head count was under way. I told him to 
keep me posted, and went off to make my speech, trying to 
put the issue out of my mind while I spoke. As I was walking 
out after the speech, I was handed a message from Tom. I 
called back immediately. “You’re not going to believe this, 
Mr. Trump,” he said, “but we’ve accounted for everyone, and 
no one was hurt.” 

Losing even one life would have been horrible and 
devastating. In this case, only the sheer luck that the men at 
the site happened to be working on another part of the garage 
at that moment saved their lives. 

It goes to show you how fragile it all really is. Those men 
were very lucky, and so was I. 



The job was finished without further incident. In May 1987 
we opened 1,200 new spaces in the parking facility connected 
by a walkway to Trump Plaza on the Boardwalk. During the 
week that followed, our slot-machine revenues more than 
doubled—mostly from the increased pedestrian traffic through 
our facility. By July, we had all 2,700 parking spaces opened, 
along with the bus terminal and the limousine dropoff—all on 
time and on budget. 



Las Vegas 


I withdrew my application for a gaming license in Las Vegas. 
Between Resorts and my two other casinos in Atlantic City, I 
had enough to occupy me in the casino business closer to 
home. My focus now is on Atlantic City, but I don’t rule out 
building or buying in Nevada at some point in the future. 



The Tramp Car 


A decision has been made to go into production on two 
Cadillac-body limousines using my name. The Trump Golden 
Series will be the most opulent stretch limousine made. The 
Trump Executive Series will be a slightly less lavish version 
of the same car. Neither one has yet come off the line, but the 
folks at Cadillac Motors Division recently sent over a beautiful 
gold Cadillac Allante as a gift. Perhaps they felt I needed more 
toys to keep me busy. 



The Drexel Deal 


I decided not to go forward with the hotel company deal that 
Drexel Burnham Lambert brought me, and I have continued 
to keep all my investment banking business with Alan 
Greenberg and Bear Stearns. It’s been a rough time for 
Drexel. 



Trump’s Castle 


I said you can’t bet against Ivana, and she proved me right 
even sooner than I expected. When the figures were 
announced for the first three months of 1987, Trump’s Castle 
had the biggest increase in revenues among all of the twelve 
casinos in Atlantic City and was the most profitable hotel in 
town. The Castle took in $76.8 million in those three months 
—a 19 percent gain over the comparable period during the 
previous year. Good as that performance is, there is no way 
Ivana will be happy until she’s far outdistanced the field. 



Gulf & Western 


I’ve been continuing to talk to Martin Davis, the chairman of 
Gulf & Western, about the theaters. In addition, I’ve since 
purchased a great deal of stock in the department store chain 
Alexander’s. The chain’s flagship location between 58th and 
59th streets and Third and Lexington avenues, next to 
Bloomingdale’s, is another perfect site for theaters—as well as 
for a mixed-use commercial and residential skyscraper. 



Mar-a-Lago 


The pool and the tennis court are finished, and both are as 
beautiful as I’d hoped they would be. As little as I’m 
interested in relaxing, I enjoy Mar-a-Lago almost in spite of 
myself. It may be as close to paradise as I’m going to get. 



Moscow Hotel 


In January 1987, I got a letter from Yuri Dubinin, the Soviet 
ambassador to the United States, that began: “It is a pleasure 
for me to relay some good news from Moscow.” It went on to 
say that the leading Soviet state agency for international 
tourism, Goscomintourist. had expressed interest in pursuing a 
joint venture to construct and manage a hotel in Moscow. On 
July 4, I flew with Ivana, her assistant Lisa Calandra, and 
Norma to Moscow. It was an extraordinary experience. We 
toured a half dozen potential sites for a hotel, including several 
near Red Square. We stayed in Lenin’s suite at the National 
Hotel, and I was impressed with the ambition of the Soviet 
officials to make a deal. 



Trump Fund 


I decided against setting up a separate fund to buy distressed 
real estate, using money raised from outside investors. I don’t 
mind taking risks myself, but the idea of being responsible for 
the money of a lot of other people—particularly when they’re 
bound to include some friends—just wasn’t appealing in the 
end. For the same reason, I’ve never been tempted to take any 
of my companies public. Making choices is a lot easier when 
you have to answer only to yourself. 



My Apartment 


The renovation on my apartment was finally finished in the 
fall of 1987. I could afford to take my time, and I’m happy 
that I did. There may be no other apartment in the world like 
it. 



Airplane 


I finally found a plane. I happened to be reading an article in 
Business Week in the spring of 1987 about a troubled, Texas- 
based company named Diamond Shamrock. The article 
described how top Shamrock executives were enjoying 
incredible perks, actually living like kings. Among the 
examples cited was a lavishly equipped company-owned 727, 
which executives flew around in at will. 

I sensed an opportunity. On Monday morning, I called the 
office of the Diamond Shamrock executive who had been 
pictured on the cover of the Business Week article. It turned 
out that he was no longer there and a new chairman, Charles 
Blackburn, had just been named. I was immediately put 
through to him, we talked for a few minutes, and I wished him 
well. Then I said that Td read about the company’s 727, and 
that if he had any interest in selling, I was interested in buying. 
Sure enough, Blackburn said that as much as they all loved 
that plane, selling it was one of the first things on his agenda. 
He even offered to send it up to New York, so that I could 
take a look at it. 

The next day I went out to La Guardia airport for a look. I 
had to smile. This plane could seat up to two hundred 
passengers, but it had been reconfigured for fifteen, and it 
included such luxuries as a bedroom, a full bath, and a 
separate working area. It was a little more plane than I needed, 
but I find it hard to resist a good deal when the opportunity 



presents itself. 

A new 727 sells for approximately $30 million. A G-4, 
which is one fourth the size, goes for about $18 million. 
However, I knew that Diamond Shamrock was hungry to sell, 
and that not very many people are in the market for 727s. 

I offered $5 million, which was obviously ridiculously low. 
They countered at $10 million, and at that point I knew I had a 
great deal, regardless of how the negotiation ended. Still, I 
haggled some more, and we finally agreed on a price of $8 
million. I don’t believe there is any other private plane in the 
sky comparable to this one. 



What’s Next 


Fortunately, I don’t know the answer, because if I did, that 
would take half the fun out of it. 

This much I do know: it won’t be the same. 

I’ve spent the first twenty years of my working life 
building, accumulating, and accomplishing things that many 
said could not be done. The biggest challenge I see over the 
next twenty years is to figure out some creative ways to give 
back some of what I’ve gotten. 

I don’t just mean money, although that’s part of it. It’s easy 
to be generous when you’ve got a lot, and anyone who does, 
should be. But what I admire most are people who put 
themselves directly on the line. I’ve never been terribly 
interested in why people give, because their motivation is 
rarely what it seems to be, and it’s almost never pure altruism. 
To me, what matters is the doing, and giving time is far more 
valuable than just giving money. 

In my life, there are two things I’ve found I’m very good 
at: overcoming obstacles and motivating good people to do 
their best work. One of the challenges ahead is how to use 
those skills as successfully in the service of others as I’ve 
done, up to now, on my own behalf. 

Don’t get me wrong. I also plan to keep making deals, big 
deals, and right around the clock. 



D ONALD J. Trump is the very definition of the American 

success story, continually setting standards of excellence 
while expanding his interests in real estate, gaming, 
sports, and entertainment. Besides their collaboration on 
The Apprentice, Trump and NBC are also partners in the 
ownership and broadcast rights for the three largest 
beauty competitions in the world. 

Trump is the New York Times best-selling author of 
Think Like a Billionaire, How to Get Rich, Surviving at 
the Top, The Art of the Comeback, and The America We 
Deserve. These books have sold millions of copies. 

An ardent philanthropist, Trump is involved with 
numerous civic and charitable organizations. In June 
2000 he received his greatest honor, given to him by the 
UJA Federation: He was named the Hotel and Real Estate 
Visionary of the Century.